Advanced search×

Electronic and school-based victimization: unique contexts for adjustment difficulties during adolescence.

J Youth Adolesc 40(4):405-15 (2011) PMID 20628795

Previous research suggests that school-based and electronic victimization have similar negative consequences, yet it is unclear whether these two contexts offer overlapping or unique associations with adolescents' adjustment. 802 ninth-graders (43% male, mean age = 15.84 years), majority being Caucasian (82%), completed measures assessing the prevalence of school and electronic victimization, as well as self-reports on self-esteem, self-efficacy, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and locus of control. Results revealed that the majority of adolescents did not report being victimized in either the electronic (75.3%) or the school (72.9%) context. Victimization in both contexts was associated with lower self-esteem and self-efficacy as well as higher stress, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and locus of control. Importantly, even after controlling for school-based victimization, electronic victimization remained as a significant predictor for all outcome measures. Different types of electronic victimization were also associated with different psychological outcomes. The findings suggest that it is important to distinguish between victimization contexts and specific adjustment outcomes as school and health officials continue to battle the effects of peer victimization.

DOI: 10.1007/s10964-010-9569-7
Version: za2963e q8zad q8zb4 q8zc3 q8zdf q8zea q8zfe q8zgb

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Infant anticipatory stress.

    Biol Lett 7(1):136-8 (2011) PMID 20739315

    We show that human infants at six months of age produce an anticipatory stress response, as indicated by the release of stress hormones, when re-exposed after 24 h to a context in which they demonstrated a stress response to a disruption in the parent-infant relationship. Although infant stress resp...
  2. Heart and soul physical activity program for African American women.

    West J Nurs Res 33(5):652-70 (2011) PMID 20966345

    African American women are less physically active than White women and have a higher prevalence of inactivity-related diseases. Increased physical activity is known to reduce the risks for many chronic diseases. Positive health behavior changes have resulted from health promotion int...
  3. Self-stigma in alcohol dependence: Consequences for drinking-refusal self-efficacy

    Drug Alcohol Depend 114(1):6 (2011) PMID 20933344

    The four stages of self-stigma could be reliably measured with the SSAD (Cronbach's alpha, 0.86-0.93). Each step in the process of self-stigmatization was most closely associated with its preceding step. Other significantly related independent variables in multiple regression analyses included desir...