Title of article
Active Defending and Passive Bystanding Behavior in Bullying: The Role of Personal Characteristics and Perceived Peer Pressure
Author/Authors
Tiziana Pozzoli، نويسنده , , Gianluca Gini، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
13
From page
815
To page
827
Abstract
This study examined the role of pro-victimattitudes,
personal responsibility, coping responses to observations of
bullying, and perceived peer normative pressure in explaining
defending the victim and passive bystanding behavior in
bullying. A total of 462 Italian early adolescents (mean age=
13.4 years, SD=9 months) participated in the study. The
behaviors were measured through two informants: each
individual student and the teachers. The findings of a series
of hierarchical regressions showed that, regardless of the
informant, problem solving coping strategies and perceived
peer normative pressure for intervention were positively
associated with active help towards a bullied peer and
negatively related to passivity. In contrast, distancing strategies
were positively associated with passive bystanding, whereas
they were negatively associated with teacher-reported defending
behavior. Moreover, self-reported defending behavior was
positively associated with personal responsibility for intervention,
but only under conditions of low perceived peer pressure.
Finally, the perception of peer pressure for intervention
buffered the negative influence of distancing on passive
bystanding tendencies. Future directions are discussed.
Keywords
Participant roles in bullying .Coping responses . Personal responsibility . Attitudes .Perceived peer pressure
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829153
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