TY - JOUR
T1 - Overcoming limitations in peer-victimization research that impede successful intervention : challenges and new directions
AU - Marsh, Herbert W.
AU - Reeve, Johnmarshall
AU - Guo, Jiesi
AU - Pekrun, Reinhard
AU - Parada, Roberto H.
AU - Parker, Philip D.
AU - Basarkod, Geetanjali
AU - Craven, Rhonda
AU - Jang, Hye-Ryen
AU - Dicke, Theresa
AU - Ciarrochi, Joseph
AU - Sahdra, Baljinder K.
AU - Devine, Emma K.
AU - Cheon, Sung Hyeon
PY - 2023/7
Y1 - 2023/7
N2 - Peer victimization at school is a worldwide problem with profound implications for victims, bullies, and whole-school communities. Yet the 50-year quest to solve the problem has produced mostly disappointing results. A critical examination of current research reveals both pivotal limitations and potential solutions. Solutions include introducing psychometrically sound measures to assess the parallel components of bullying and victimization, analyzing cross-national data sets, and embracing a social-ecological perspective emphasizing the motivation of bullies, importance of bystanders, pro-defending and antibullying attitudes, classroom climate, and a multilevel perspective. These solutions have been integrated into a series of recent interventions. Teachers can be professionally trained to create a highly supportive climate that allows student-bystanders to overcome their otherwise normative tendency to reinforce bullies. Once established, this intervention-enabled classroom climate impedes bully-victim episodes. The take-home message is to work with teachers on how to develop an interpersonally supportive classroom climate at the beginning of the school year to catalyze student-bystanders’ volitional internalization of pro-defending and antibullying attitudes and social norms. Recommendations for future research include studying bullying and victimization simultaneously, testing multilevel models, targeting classroom climate and bystander roles as critical intervention outcomes, and integrating school-wide and individual student interventions only after improving social norms and the school climate.
AB - Peer victimization at school is a worldwide problem with profound implications for victims, bullies, and whole-school communities. Yet the 50-year quest to solve the problem has produced mostly disappointing results. A critical examination of current research reveals both pivotal limitations and potential solutions. Solutions include introducing psychometrically sound measures to assess the parallel components of bullying and victimization, analyzing cross-national data sets, and embracing a social-ecological perspective emphasizing the motivation of bullies, importance of bystanders, pro-defending and antibullying attitudes, classroom climate, and a multilevel perspective. These solutions have been integrated into a series of recent interventions. Teachers can be professionally trained to create a highly supportive climate that allows student-bystanders to overcome their otherwise normative tendency to reinforce bullies. Once established, this intervention-enabled classroom climate impedes bully-victim episodes. The take-home message is to work with teachers on how to develop an interpersonally supportive classroom climate at the beginning of the school year to catalyze student-bystanders’ volitional internalization of pro-defending and antibullying attitudes and social norms. Recommendations for future research include studying bullying and victimization simultaneously, testing multilevel models, targeting classroom climate and bystander roles as critical intervention outcomes, and integrating school-wide and individual student interventions only after improving social norms and the school climate.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:68574
UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/17456916221112919
U2 - 10.1177/17456916221112919
DO - 10.1177/17456916221112919
M3 - Article
SN - 1745-6916
VL - 18
SP - 812
EP - 828
JO - Perspectives on Psychological Science
JF - Perspectives on Psychological Science
IS - 4
ER -