AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores how student-teacher relationships can impact bullying behaviors and peer victimization among students, focusing on the roles of student-teacher conflict and social status within the classroom.
  • A sample of 1,742 students revealed that higher conflict in student-teacher relationships was linked to increased bullying and victimization, particularly among rejected students, as well as among popular students in conflict with teachers.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of fostering positive student-teacher relationships to reduce aggression and victimization, particularly for those students who are socially rejected by their peers.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Student-teacher relationships have been shown to influence bullying-related behaviors in students. In this study we considered the moderating role of student-teacher conflict and students' social status in the classroom and involvement in bullying behaviors and peer victimization.

Methods: Sample consisted of 1742 students (47.2% females, mean age = 10.79; SD = 1.36; range = 8-14) clustered in 113 classrooms, of which 1017 (58.4%) attended primary schools and 725 (41.6%) attended lower secondary schools. We implemented a series of multilevel analyses aimed at determining the role of student-teacher conflict, and students' social status among classroom peers (i.e., average, popular, rejected, neglected, and controversial statuses), as well their interaction, in influencing verbal, physical, and social forms of bullying and victimization at school.

Results: Student-teacher conflict had a significant positive effect on all bullying and victimization variables. Regarding students' social status, rejected students showed increased bullying and victimization when compared with average students, except in social bullying. Significant interactions emerged indicating that a highly conflictual student-teacher relationship exacerbated bullying behaviors and the risk of victimization among rejected students. Additionally, popular students who had conflictual relationship with their teachers were more likely to engage in physical bullying then average students.

Conclusions: Our study suggests the importance of low conflictual student-teacher relationships in acting as a buffer for aggressive student-student interactions in the classroom, especially when these interactions involve students rejected by their classroom peers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2021.01.005DOI Listing

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