Abstract

Ecological studies, when the school is the unit of analysis, may help to design and evaluate school intervention programs. The paper discusses selected contextual determinants of bullying, using data collected in Poland in 2015 and aggregated to school level (4085 students; 70 junior high schools). The main hypothesis is related to the neighborhood social capital as protective factor and the type of community as a modifier. The main dependent variable was the combined index of bullying which included three perspectives (victim, perpetrator, bystander). Student delinquent behavior was taken into account as potential determinant, along with selected characteristics of the school and neighborhood. The analyses were adjusted for the percentage of the surveyed boys. The overall bullying index ranged, depending on the school, from 0.88 to 4.07 points (out of 12 possible); intraclass coefficient ICC = 2.8%. In the entire sample, the main predictors of bullying were student delinquent behaviors as a risk factor and the school social climate as a protective factor (R2 = 56.3%). The stratification of schools due to their location influences the inference regarding those main determinants. The dominating influence of delinquent behavior is visible only in big cities where bullying index showed the highest dispersion. In smaller towns and rural areas, the neighborhood social capital becomes an important protective factor; highly correlated with the school climate. We can conclude that strong social bonds in the community are supportive for school climate and can reduce the level of bullying at schools.

Highlights

  • The number of papers about bullying in school environments has increased significantly over the last two decades

  • If at least one episode of contact with bullying over the last two months is taken into account, this percentage increases to 61.8% (66.1% of boys and 57.9% of girls—v2 = 28,8; df = 1; p \ 0.001)

  • The focus was on comparing schools from the perspective of a general threat of peer violence

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Summary

Introduction

The number of papers about bullying in school environments has increased significantly over the last two decades. Special attention is given to the phenomenon of bullying, defined as repetitive aggressive behavior toward a student or group of students who are weaker and incapable of defending themselves. This may take the form of physical, verbal, or emotional aggression, with cyber bullying being a new, recent form (Selkie, Fales, & Moreno, 2016). There are an increasing number of systematic reviews concerning the background of bullying and the effectiveness of School Mental Health (2017) 9:132–142 intervention programs (Chalamandaris & Piette, 2015; Jimenez-Barbero et al, 2016; Park-Higgerson, PerumeanChaney, Bartolucci, Grimley, & Singh, 2008; Ttofi & Farrington, 2011)

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