4.3 Article

Stability of peer victimization in early adolescence: Effects of timing and duration

期刊

JOURNAL OF SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
卷 49, 期 4, 页码 443-464

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsp.2011.04.005

关键词

Peer victimization; Bullying; Stability; Internalizing distress; Academic achievement; Gender differences

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The current study investigated the stability of peer victimization and the impact of the timing and duration of victimization on psychological and academic outcomes for boys and girls on a sample of 863 middle school students. Results demonstrated strong support for the onset hypothesis and concurrent effects of maladjustment in anxiety, depression, self-esteem, poor school attitude, GPA, and attendance. Support for the cessation hypothesis was mixed, depending on the outcome and gentler: boys demonstrated recovery from internalizing distress, whereas girls demonstrated residual effects, even after the cessation of victimization. Girls also demonstrated residual effects of victimization on grades, and both boys and girls evidenced residual effects of victimization on attendance. Regarding duration of victimization, there was strong support for the life-events model of stress and coping across almost all outcomes, suggesting that even temporary experiences of victimization could have a negative impact on psychological and academic outcomes. Overall, results demonstrated the importance of considering the timing and duration of victimization in understanding the risks and damaging effects of victimization. The results from this study also highlight both the need and the potential to intervene during early adolescence when peer relationships are taking on increasing importance, as well as the importance of helping students regain social-emotional and academic functioning, even after victimization ceases. (C) 2011 Society for the Study of School Psychology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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