Rice Eric, Petering Robin, Rhoades Harmony, Winetrobe Hailey, Goldbach Jeremy, Plant Aaron, Montoya Jorge, Kordic Timothy
Eric Rice, Robin Petering, Harmony Rhoades, Hailey Winetrobe, and Jeremy Goldbach are with the School of Social Work, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Aaron Plant and Jorge Montoya are with Sentient Research, West Covina, CA. Timothy Kordic is with Los Angeles Unified School District, Health Education Programs, HIV/AIDS Prevention Unit, Los Angeles.
Am J Public Health. 2015 Mar;105(3):e66-72. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2014.302393. Epub 2015 Jan 20.
We examined correlations between gender, race, sexual identity, and technology use, and patterns of cyberbullying experiences and behaviors among middle-school students.
We collected a probability sample of 1285 students alongside the 2012 Youth Risk Behavior Survey in Los Angeles Unified School District middle schools. We used logistic regressions to assess the correlates of being a cyberbully perpetrator, victim, and perpetrator-victim (i.e., bidirectional cyberbullying behavior).
In this sample, 6.6% reported being a cyberbully victim, 5.0% reported being a perpetrator, and 4.3% reported being a perpetrator-victim. Cyberbullying behavior frequently occurred on Facebook or via text messaging. Cyberbully perpetrators, victims, and perpetrators-victims all were more likely to report using the Internet for at least 3 hours per day. Sexual-minority students and students who texted at least 50 times per day were more likely to report cyberbullying victimization. Girls were more likely to report being perpetrators-victims.
Cyberbullying interventions should account for gender and sexual identity, as well as the possible benefits of educational interventions for intensive Internet users and frequent texters.
我们研究了中学生的性别、种族、性取向与技术使用之间的相关性,以及网络欺凌经历和行为的模式。
我们在洛杉矶联合学区中学的2012年青少年风险行为调查中收集了1285名学生的概率样本。我们使用逻辑回归来评估成为网络欺凌者、受害者以及欺凌者-受害者(即双向网络欺凌行为)的相关因素。
在这个样本中,6.6%的学生报告曾是网络欺凌受害者,5.0%报告曾是欺凌者,4.3%报告既是欺凌者又是受害者。网络欺凌行为经常发生在脸书上或通过短信。网络欺凌的实施者、受害者以及既是实施者又是受害者的学生都更有可能报告每天上网至少3小时。性少数群体学生和每天至少发短信50次的学生更有可能报告遭受网络欺凌。女孩更有可能报告既是欺凌者又是受害者。
网络欺凌干预措施应考虑到性别和性取向,以及针对频繁上网者和频繁发短信者的教育干预可能带来的益处。