Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

‘The more public it is, the more severe it is’: teachers’ perceptions on the roles of publicity and severity in cyberbullying

Peter J. R. Macaulay, Lucy R. Betts, James Stiller, Blerina Këllezi

Research Papers in Education · 2020

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Summary

Those in the teaching profession are facing additional challenges when responding to cyberbullying due to the unique features of publicity and severity. Such features are known to negatively impact on young people’s cyberbullying experiences. Teachers’ views on publicity and severity of cyberbullying are currently unknown. The current research draws on data from 10 focus groups with 63 teachers (10 males) who taught across primary, secondary, and college educational levels in the UK. Reflexive thematic analysis identified three themes: (a) role of severity, (b) differential roles of publicity, and (c) bystander intentions. Participants discussed the role of severity, where visual acts of cyberbullying were perceived more severe than written forms, suggesting the type of cyberbullying is an

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1080/02671522.2020.1767183
Catalogue ID
SNmoh9mp1o-7uibdc
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