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Recollections of childhood bullying and multiple forms of victimization: correlates with psychological functioning among college students
Authors:Dorothy L. Espelage  Jun Sung Hong  Sarah Mebane
Affiliation:1.Child Development Division, Department of Educational Psychology,University of Illinois,Champaign,USA;2.School of Social Work,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA;3.Department of Social Welfare,Sungkyunkwan University,Seoul,South Korea;4.Behavioral Health - Community Counseling Program, Marine and Family Programs Branch,Marine Corps Community Services,Okinawa,Japan
Abstract:This retrospective investigation examined the association among childhood bullying victimization, multiple forms of victimization, and psychological functioning in a college sample. Four hundred-and-eighty-two undergraduate students participated in the study (M = 19.98 years, SD = 1.82). The sample included 65 % women. For race/ethnicity, 66.4 % were European-American (N = 320), 16.8 % African-American (N = 81). For grade level, 21.6 % were freshmen (N = 104), followed by 38.2 % sophomores (N = 184), 16.2 % juniors (N = 78), and 23.4 % seniors (N = 113). Participants completed a survey packet of measures assessing childhood bullying victimization experiences and current levels of psychological functioning. Findings indicated that bullying victimization significantly predicted greater levels of depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress (PTS) after controlling for other childhood victimization experiences. PTS symptoms were predicted by exposure to community violence and child abuse with bullying victimization was found to be the strongest predictor. College-level practitioners need to assess for a wide range of childhood victimization experiences, including bullying victimization.
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