Abstract

Students with poor reading skills and reading difficulties (RDs) are at elevated risk for bullying involvement in elementary school, but it is not known whether they are at risk also later in adolescence. This study investigated the longitudinal interplay between reading skills (fluency and comprehension), victimization, and bullying across the transition from elementary to middle school, controlling for externalizing and internalizing problems. The sample consists of 1,824 students (47.3% girls, T1 mean age was 12 years 9 months) from 150 Grade 6 classrooms, whose reading fluency and comprehension, self-reported victimization and bullying, and self-reported externalizing and internalizing problems were measured in Grades 6, 7, and 9. Two cross-lagged panel models with three time-points were fitted to the data separately for reading fluency and comprehension. The results indicated that poorer fluency and comprehension skills in Grade 6 predicted bullying perpetration in Grade 7, and poorer fluency and comprehension skills in Grade 7 predicted bullying perpetration in Grade 9. Neither fluency nor comprehension were longitudinally associated with victimization. The effects of reading skills on bullying perpetration were relatively small and externalizing problems increased the risk for bullying others more than poor reading skills did. However, it is important that those who struggle with reading get academic support in school throughout their school years, and social support when needed.

Highlights

  • Adolescence is a period of change in many domains

  • The present study investigates the interplay between reading skills, victimization and bullying across the transition from elementary to middle school in Finnish school context where students are 12 years old when they transit from elementary school (Grade 6) to middle school (Grade 7)

  • This study is the first one to explore associations between poor reading, bullying, and victimization in adolescence, and the first one to take into account reading comprehension when examining the associations with reading difficulties (RDs) and bullying involvement

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescence is a period of change in many domains. Cognitive, and social changes occur gradually and at individual pace, but the educational transition from elementary to middle school has a similar schedule for the entire peer group. For most adolescents acclimation to middle school is fast and successful [1,2,3,4], the transition can be a stressful experience [5,6,7,8]. Poor reading skills, bullying and victimization from elementary to middle school

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