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Journal ArticleDOI

Bullies, Victims, and Bully/Victims: Distinct Groups of At-Risk Youth

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TLDR
The authors found that bullying and victimization are prevalent problems in the area of adolescent peer relationships, with 30.9% of the students reporting being victimized three or more times in the past year and 7.4% reported bullying three ormore times over the past one year.
Abstract
Bullying and victimization are prevalent problems in the area of adolescent peer relationships. Middle school students (N = 4,263) in one Maryland school district completed surveys covering a range of problem behaviors and psychosocial variables. Overall,30.9% of the students reported being victimized three or more times in the past year and 7.4% reported bullying three or more times over the past year. More than one half of the bullies also reported being victimized. Those bully/victims were found to score less favorably than either bullies or victims on all the measured psychosocial and behavioral variables. Results of a discriminant function analysis demonstrated that a group of psychosocial and behavioral predictors—including problem behaviors, attitudes toward deviance, peer influences, depressive symptoms, school-related functioning, and parenting—formed a linear separation between the comparison group (never bullied or victimized), the victim group, the bully group, and the bully/victim group.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bullying Behaviors Among US Youth: Prevalence and Association With Psychosocial Adjustment

TL;DR: The issue of bullying merits serious attention, both for future research and preventive intervention, as well as the potential long-term negative outcomes for these youth.
Journal ArticleDOI

School Bullying Among Adolescents in the United States: Physical, Verbal, Relational, and Cyber

TL;DR: Parental support may protect adolescents from all four forms of bullying, and results indicate that cyber bullying is a distinct nature from that of traditional bullying.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence estimation of school bullying with the Olweus Bully Victim Questionnaire

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the functionality of two global variables in the Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire and examined the appropriateness of different cutoff points of these variables for prevalence estimation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictors of Bullying and Victimization in Childhood and Adolescence: A Meta-analytic Investigation

TL;DR: In this article, the predictors of three bully status groups (bullies, victims, and bully victims) for school-age children and adolescents were synthesized using meta-analytic procedures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bullying and the peer group: A review

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the literature on the group involvement in bullying and provided insight into the individuals' motives for participation in bullying, the persistence of bullying, and the adjustment of victims across different peer contexts.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bullying Behaviors Among US Youth: Prevalence and Association With Psychosocial Adjustment

TL;DR: The issue of bullying merits serious attention, both for future research and preventive intervention, as well as the potential long-term negative outcomes for these youth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relational aggression, gender, and social-psychological adjustment.

TL;DR: In the present study, a form of aggression hypothesized to be typical of girls, relational aggression, was assessed with a peer nomination instrument for a sample of third-through sixth-grade children and indicated that girls were significantly more relationally aggressive than were boys.
Book

Bullying at School: What We Know and What We Can Do

Dan Olweus
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of intervention programs for bullying in Norway and Sweden, focusing on three levels of intervention: the individual level: serious talks with the bully, the teacher level, and the class level.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Influence of Parenting Style on Adolescent Competence and Substance Use

TL;DR: The authors found that authoritative parents who are highly demanding and highly responsive were remarkably successful in protecting their adolescents from problem drug use, and in generating competence, and that authoritative upbringing, although sufficient, is not a necessary condition to produce competent children.
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