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Peer-reviewed

Teacher and staff perceptions of school environment as predictors of student aggression, victimization, and willingness to intervene in bullying situations.

Dorothy L. Espelage, Joshua R. Polanin, Sabina Low

School Psychology Quarterly · 2014

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Summary

This study examines how teacher and staff perceptions of the school environment correlate with student self-reports of bullying, aggression, victimization, and willingness to intervene in bullying incidents using multi-informant, multilevel modeling. Data were derived from 3,616 6th grade students across 36 middle schools in the Midwest, who completed survey measures of bullying, aggression, victimization, and willingness to intervene in bullying situations. Teachers and staff (n = 1,447) completed a school environment survey. Bivariate associations between school-level and student self-reports indicated that as teacher and staff perceive aggression as a problem in their school, students reported greater bully perpetration, fighting, peer victimization, and less willingness to intervene. F

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1037/spq0000072
Catalogue ID
SNmojj2160-avdhgr
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