Ecological correlates of bullying and peer victimization among urban African American adolescents

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Issue Date
2021-06-17
Authors
Lee, Jeoung Min
Hong, Jun Sung
Resko, Stella M.
González-Prendes, A. Antonio
Voisin, Dexter R.
Advisor
Citation

Lee, J. M., Hong, J. S., Resko, S. M., Gonzalez-Prendes, A. A., & Voisin, D. R. (2021). Ecological correlates of bullying and peer victimization among urban african american adolescents. Journal of Educational Research, doi:10.1080/00220671.2021.1937914

Abstract

Adolescent bullying is a concern for adolescents, parents, teachers, school officials, and the general public. The purpose of the study is to apply Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems perspective and explore factors that are correlated with bullying perpetration and victimization among 638 urban African American adolescents in Chicago's Southside. Bullying victimization and perpetration are found to be influenced by microsystem-level factors, such as exposure to delinquent peers, teacher support, and neighborhood disorganization. An intervention strategy that involves teachers is particularly important. Anti-bullying intervention and prevention programs in urban schools need to account for the unique situations of urban African American adolescents.

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