Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Perceived prevalence of teasing and bullying predicts high school dropout rates.

Dewey G. Cornell, Anne Gregory, Francis L. Huang, Xitao Fan

Journal of Educational Psychology · 2012

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Summary

This prospective study of 276 Virginia public high schools found that the prevalence of teasing and bullying (PTB) as perceived by both 9th-grade students and teachers was predictive of dropout rates for this cohort 4 years later. Negative binomial regression indicated that one standard deviation increases in student- and teacher-reported PTB were associated with 16.5% and 10.8% increases in the number of dropouts, respectively, after controlling for the effects of other predictors, including school size, student body poverty and minority composition, community crime rates, and performance on standardized achievement testing. The predictive values of student and teacher perceptions of PTB were comparable in magnitude to the predictive values for other commonly recognized correlates of drop

Subject
Arable cropping systems
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1037/a0030416
Catalogue ID
SNmojj1yox-7aytiz
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