Oranim College of Education, Kiryat Tiv'on, Israel.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mount Scopus, Israel.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Jun;37(11-12):NP9446-NP9468. doi: 10.1177/0886260520983278. Epub 2020 Dec 23.
Cultural contexts are formative of and fundamental to how individuals understand, conceptualize, and act within a context of violence. Conceptually and methodologically, however, research from a culturally informed perspective on the experiences of teachers contending with the violence of child sexual abuse (CSA) in particular is broadly limited. As educators frequently confront cases of CSA in their everyday work, their ability to promote detection, disclosure intervention, and especially prevention gives them the potential to be agents of social change; however, while their responsibilities are critical, they are simultaneously members of their communities and cultures, and their interactions are bound by these dynamics. The purpose of the study is to analyze the experiences of Arab teachers in Israel who confront CSA in their everyday work. The findings are based on qualitative thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews conducted with 30 female Arab teachers working within the Arab school system in Israel. Results indicate that when facing CSA, the teachers experience an ongoing conflict between their cultural and professional codes, trapping them in a maze of intertwining and oppositional demands. On the one hand, they are constrained by the norm of protecting the honor and maintaining the status and reputation of those involved, including themselves; on the other hand, as empathetic professionals, they desire to aid their pupils. While the participants do not accept the status quo, they are effectively at a loss as to how to change it. In order find a way out of their entrapment in coping with CSA among their pupils, the only currently available path is to act as a lone hero; there is, however, the potential to foster the development of a secondary culture within the school to inaugurate cultural change in coping with CSA. Implications for future research, policy, and practice are discussed.
文化背景是个体在暴力背景下理解、概念化和行动的形成因素和基础。然而,从文化视角研究教师应对儿童性虐待 (CSA) 暴力的经验,在概念上和方法论上都受到广泛限制。由于教育工作者在日常工作中经常会遇到 CSA 的案例,他们促进发现、披露干预,特别是预防的能力使他们有可能成为社会变革的推动者;然而,虽然他们的责任至关重要,但他们同时也是其社区和文化的成员,他们的互动受到这些动态的限制。本研究的目的是分析在以色列的阿拉伯教师在日常工作中应对 CSA 的经历。研究结果基于对在以色列阿拉伯学校系统工作的 30 名阿拉伯女教师进行的半结构化访谈的定性主题分析。研究结果表明,当面对 CSA 时,教师会经历文化和专业规范之间的持续冲突,使他们陷入交织和对立需求的迷宫中。一方面,他们受到保护名誉和维护涉事者(包括他们自己)的地位和声誉的规范的约束;另一方面,作为富有同情心的专业人士,他们渴望帮助学生。虽然参与者不接受现状,但他们实际上不知道如何改变它。为了在应对学生中的 CSA 时摆脱困境,唯一可行的方法是作为一个孤独的英雄;然而,有可能在学校内培养次要文化,以开启应对 CSA 的文化变革。讨论了对未来研究、政策和实践的影响。