AI Article Synopsis

  • Bullying among adolescents is a critical global health issue that affects their development, with research indicating that those who are bullied are more likely to engage in bullying others later on.
  • A study using data from high school students in China found a significant link between past experiences of being bullied and future bullying behavior, with other factors like fear of negative evaluation and psychache playing a role in this relationship.
  • The research led to the development of the Threat-Motivation Model, which helps explain how bullying victimization can lead to perpetration, with suggestions for practical strategies to reduce youth bullying.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Bullying among adolescents is a global public health issue prevalent in schools, posing significant risks to positive adolescent development. Studies have shown that bullied adolescents tend to engage in more bullying perpetration, but this underlying process of longitudinal correlation has not been fully elucidated.

Methods: Based on two waves of longitudinal data collected from 347 junior and 144 senior high school students in China (M = 13.66 years, SD = 1.46, 59.27% boys) at 1-year intervals, two moderated chain-mediation models were used to explore the longitudinal correlations between bullying victimization and bullying perpetration and its underlying processes.

Results: The results found a significant positive correlation between adolescents' bullying victimization experiences 1 year prior and bullying perpetration 1 year later. Furthermore, fear of negative evaluation and psychache played a longitudinal chain-mediating role in the process, with self-esteem and grade moderating this mediating pathway, either enhancing or weakening the effect.

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that prior bullying victimization is longitudinally and positively associated with subsequent bullying perpetration among adolescents. This process is mediated by fear of negative evaluation and psychache, with self-esteem and grade level as moderators. Based on these conclusions, we have formulated the Threat-Motivation Model, offering a framework to understand the relationship between bullying victimization and bullying perpetration. Practical implications, including strategies to reduce bullying in youth groups, are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jad.12420DOI Listing

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