School of Education, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA, USA.
School of Education, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
J Youth Adolesc. 2017 Nov;46(11):2273-2288. doi: 10.1007/s10964-017-0688-2. Epub 2017 May 15.
Patterns of adjustment for youth victimized by peers vary depending on whether youth are identified as victims through self-reports, peer-reports, or both. In order to provide more targeted strategies that may help mitigate negative consequences associated with specific victimization groups, more information is needed about how these youth perceive their school ecology (bullying and academic ecology), their feelings of school belonging, and their valuing of school. Based on the convergence of self- and peer-reports of victimization, we identified four victim groups from a sample of students in 5th grade classrooms (N = 1360; 52.8% girls, 53.1% White, 34.6% Black or Hispanic, 12.2% Native American, Asian, or other) using Latent Profile Analysis (LPA): convergent victims (high self- and peer-reports), self-identified victims (high self-, low peer-reports), peer-identified victims (low self-, high peer-reports), and nonvictims (low self- and peer-reports). Convergent victims' perceptions were similar to nonvictims with key differences being convergent victims' greater willingness to protect peers being bullied but lower feelings of school belonging compared to nonvictims. Peer-identified and self-identified victims perceived differences in the bullying and academic ecology including peer-identified victims' greater willingness to protect peers and expectations for more peers to encourage bulling against them compared to self-identified victims. However, both peer- and self-identified victims perceived greater emotional risk of participating in class and had lower feelings of school belonging compared to nonvictims. Implications for supporting youth with divergent self- and peer-reported victimization status as they transition to middle school are discussed.
青少年被同龄人欺凌的调整模式因青少年是通过自我报告、同伴报告还是两者兼而有之所认定的受害者而异。为了提供更有针对性的策略,可能有助于减轻与特定受害群体相关的负面后果,我们需要更多关于这些青少年如何看待他们的学校生态(欺凌和学术生态)、他们对学校的归属感以及他们对学校的重视程度的信息。基于自我报告和同伴报告的欺凌行为的趋同,我们使用潜在剖面分析(LPA)从五年级课堂上的学生样本中确定了四个受害群体(N=1360;52.8%的女生,53.1%的白人,34.6%的黑人或西班牙裔,12.2%的美洲原住民、亚洲人或其他):趋同受害者(高自我和同伴报告)、自我认定的受害者(高自我,低同伴报告)、同伴认定的受害者(低自我,高同伴报告)和非受害者(低自我和同伴报告)。趋同受害者的看法与非受害者相似,主要区别在于趋同受害者更愿意保护被欺凌的同伴,但与非受害者相比,他们对学校的归属感较低。同伴认定和自我认定的受害者对欺凌和学术生态的看法存在差异,包括同伴认定的受害者更愿意保护同伴,并期望更多的同伴鼓励欺负他们,而自我认定的受害者则没有。然而,与非受害者相比,同伴认定和自我认定的受害者都认为参与课堂的情绪风险更大,对学校的归属感较低。讨论了支持在向中学过渡期间具有不同自我和同伴报告受害状况的青少年的相关问题。