Online and offline victimisation: a cluster analysis of adolescent victims of bullying and cyber-bullying in Chile

IF 2.1 3区 心理学 Q2 COMMUNICATION Journal of Children and Media Pub Date : 2021-04-06 DOI:10.1080/17482798.2021.1902358
Nico Trajtenberg, Matías Dodel, Olga Sánchez de Ribera, P. Cabello, Magdalena Claro
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

ABSTRACT Bullying and cyberbullying victimisation are serious problems worldwide, especially among children and adolescents. However, there is much research on risk factors, the evidence about victim typologies that combine online and offline bullying with the specific nature of the victimisation episodes and other sociodemographic and individual features is still scarce. This study contributes by combining the poly-victim framework with the cyberbullying and online risk approaches. We used data from the Kids Online survey conducted in 2016 and analysed a national sample of 1,000 Internet users in Chile between 9 and 17 years old. The aim was to classify youth based on their cyber and traditional bullying experiences and examine the clusters’ features based on age, sex, socioeconomic status, technology use and skills, risky offline behaviours and well-being. A two-step cluster analysis identified three groups: poly-victims (23%), occasional digital victims (30%), and frequent offline victims (41%). These groups significantly differed by age, sex, Internet use, digital skills, risky offline behaviours and psychological characteristics. These results highlight the heterogeneity and complexity of both traditional and cyberbullying and the need to tailor interventions for diverse types of victims. IMPACT SUMMARY a. Prior State of Knowledge: Bullying is a serious problem both in its traditional and cyber-forms. Both share commonalities and present divergences regarding risk factors and psychological consequences associated. Whereas they can be distinct types of victimisation, a significant percentage of victims suffer both. b. Novel Contributions: Frequent offline bullying, occasional digital victimisation, and poly-victimisation should be considered three victimisation forms. These three experiences differ significantly in their age and sex composition, Internet use, digital skills, risky offline behaviours and psychological characteristics. c. Practical Implications: Identification of victim groups is critical to developing a more tailored approach to support different victims and reduce various forms of harassment. Moreso, because the current impacts of bullying-prevention programs are relatively small.
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在线和离线受害:智利欺凌和网络欺凌青少年受害者的聚类分析
摘要欺凌和网络欺凌受害者是世界范围内的严重问题,尤其是在儿童和青少年中。然而,有很多关于风险因素的研究,关于将线上和线下欺凌与受害事件的具体性质以及其他社会人口和个人特征相结合的受害者类型的证据仍然很少。这项研究将多受害者框架与网络欺凌和网络风险方法相结合。我们使用了2016年儿童在线调查的数据,分析了智利1000名9至17岁互联网用户的全国样本。其目的是根据青少年的网络和传统欺凌经历对其进行分类,并根据年龄、性别、社会经济地位、技术使用和技能、危险的离线行为和幸福感来检查集群的特征。两步聚类分析确定了三组:多受害者(23%)、偶尔的数字受害者(30%)和经常离线的受害者(41%)。这些群体在年龄、性别、互联网使用、数字技能、危险的离线行为和心理特征方面存在显著差异。这些结果突出了传统欺凌和网络欺凌的异质性和复杂性,以及为不同类型的受害者量身定制干预措施的必要性。影响总结a.先前的知识状态:欺凌是一个严重的问题,无论是传统形式还是网络形式。两者在风险因素和相关的心理后果方面有着共同点和分歧。尽管它们可能是不同类型的受害者,但相当大比例的受害者同时遭受这两种伤害。b.新颖贡献:频繁的线下欺凌、偶尔的数字受害和多重受害应被视为三种受害形式。这三种经历在年龄和性别构成、互联网使用、数字技能、危险的离线行为和心理特征方面存在显著差异。c.实际影响:识别受害者群体对于制定更具针对性的方法来支持不同的受害者和减少各种形式的骚扰至关重要。更重要的是,因为目前欺凌预防计划的影响相对较小。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
3.30%
发文量
26
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