What Constitutes Cyberbullying: Perspectives from Middle School Students

Jenny Mischel, A. Kitsantas
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Abstract

This study used an explanatory mixed methods approach in order to better understand what constitutes cyberbullying behavior through the lens of middle school students. Participants (N=189) were asked to respond to descriptive vignettes of potential cyberbullying situations, increasing in severity. A subset of the students (N=6) also participated in semi-structured interviews. Findings suggest middle school students perceive online interactions to escalate into cyberbullying when posted messages might damage one’s reputation or friendships (i.e., denigration) or when inappropriate shared artifacts result to negative commentary (i.e., outing/trickery). Main concerns for these types of transactions were the perpetrator’s intent to cause harm as well as the potential for an online interaction to be shared publicly. According to participants, most distressing was for posts (e.g., messages, images, rumors) to be experienced repeatedly. Instead of the recipient to experience undue stress through one post, they may experience repeated victimization through additional comments. Implications for educators and limitations are discussed.
什么构成网络欺凌:中学生视角
本研究采用解释性混合方法,通过中学生的视角更好地理解网络欺凌行为的构成。参与者(N=189)被要求对潜在网络欺凌情况的描述性小插曲做出回应,这些情况的严重程度不断增加。一部分学生(N=6)也参加了半结构化访谈。研究结果表明,当发布的信息可能损害一个人的声誉或友谊(即诋毁),或者当不适当的共享工件导致负面评论(即外出/恶作剧)时,中学生会认为网络互动升级为网络欺凌。这些类型的交易主要关注的是犯罪者造成伤害的意图以及公开分享在线互动的可能性。根据参与者的说法,最令人痛苦的是帖子(如消息、图片、谣言)被反复体验。接收者不会因为一篇帖子而经历过度的压力,他们可能会因为更多的评论而经历反复的伤害。讨论了对教育工作者的影响和局限性。
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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