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Bullying types and roles in early adolescence: Latent classes of perpetrators and victims
Affiliation:1. Montclair State University, Department of Psychology, Montclair, NJ 04043, United States of America;2. Governors State University, Department of Psychology, University Park, IL 60484, United States of America;3. Wheaton College, School of Psychology, Counseling, and Family Therapy, Wheaton, IL 60187, United States of America;1. University of Oregon, United States of America;2. University of British Columbia, Canada;1. National Science and Service Collaborative, ServeMinnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States of America;3. Center for Promoting Research to Practice, Department of Education and Human Services, Lehigh University, United States of America
Abstract:Although research has suggested that youth involved in bullying as victims, perpetrators, or both are at risk for negative outcomes, less work has investigated different patterns in how youth are involved in bullying with consideration for both the role (i.e., victimization and perpetration) as well as type of behaviors experienced (i.e., cyber, verbal, relational, and physical). Using Latent Class Analysis (LCA), the current study investigated patterns of bullying involvement with a sample of 799 middle school students. Results indicated that five classes of bully-involved youth emerged, including a (a) not involved class, (b) traditional bully victim class, (c) verbal bully-victim class, (d) traditional victim-only class, and (e) cyber bully-victim class. Notably, the bully-involved groups demonstrated significantly more internalizing, externalizing, and school related problems than youth not involved in bullying. Implications regarding identification of youth at risk for social and emotional challenges and intervention planning for bully involved youth are discussed.
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