Entering the Classroom: Do Newcomers Experience More Peer Victimization than Their Established Peers?

IF 2.9 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-13 DOI:10.1007/s10802-024-01225-6
Essi-Lotta Tenhunen, Sarah Malamut, Patricia McMullin, Tiina Turunen, Takuya Yanagida, Christina Salmivalli
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Abstract

Students changing classrooms or schools may face challenges from entering a new peer context without friends and standing out from the crowd as newcomers. Two studies examined whether newcomer status predicts peer victimization at school, exploring several potential moderating factors (e.g., social anxiety, immigrant background and having good friends in the classroom) (Study 1: n = 6,199; Mage=12.53) and whether being victimized as a newcomer varied based on the different reasons for mobility (e.g., parental dissolution, residential move, previous victimization, changing into a more suitable school) (Study 2: n = 58,738). In both studies, newcomers reported higher peer victimization compared to established students. Having good friends in the classroom was found as a protective factor in Study 1, being the only statistically significant moderator. All reasons for mobility, except changing into a more suitable school, predicted slightly higher peer victimization in Study 2, with the highest risk for those changing schools due to previous peer victimization experiences.

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进入教室:新生是否比老生更容易遭受同伴伤害?
更换教室或学校的学生可能会面临这样的挑战:在没有朋友的情况下进入一个新的同伴环境,并且作为新来者在人群中脱颖而出。有两项研究探讨了新生身份是否会预测在学校的同伴受害情况,并探索了几个潜在的调节因素(如社交焦虑、移民背景和在教室里有好朋友)(研究1:n = 6 199;Mage=12.53),以及作为新生的受害情况是否会因不同的流动原因(如父母离异、搬家、以前的受害情况、转入更合适的学校)而有所不同(研究2:n = 58 738)。在这两项研究中,新生报告的同伴受害情况均高于老生。在研究 1 中,在教室里有好朋友被认为是一个保护因素,是唯一在统计上有意义的调节因素。在研究 2 中,除了转学到更合适的学校外,其他所有流动原因都会导致同伴受害率略有上升,其中因以前的同伴受害经历而转学的风险最高。
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来源期刊
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology Psychology-Developmental and Educational Psychology
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.00%
发文量
107
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