{"title":"追踪沉默的斗争:以自我为中心的网络分析检视教师受害的特征与关联。","authors":"Ella Rho, Chunyan Yang","doi":"10.1037/spq0000699","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>A growing body of research has focused on teacher victimization, examining its prevalence and effects. However, no study has yet used network theory to examine the impact of teachers' networks with aggressive and violent students on psychological distress, burnout, and turnover intentions. Addressing this gap, we used egocentric network analysis and path analysis to explore (a) the structure (e.g., centrality, density) and characteristics (e.g., racial homophily, severity, frequency) of networks comprising aggressive and violent students and (b) their impacts on teacher psychological distress and burnout, subsequently influencing turnover intention. Five hundred and seven K-12 teachers were recruited from 42 U.S. states using snowball sampling, who collectively reported 1,703 aggressive or violent students. On average, each teacher experienced victimization from three different students. We found no tendency for those students to share racial or ethnic backgrounds with their victimized teachers. The network was also found to be not highly interconnected, pointing to individualized rather than group-based aggression and violence. Path analysis showed that teachers' network centrality with students exhibiting challenging behaviors was associated with increased psychological distress and burnout, which in turn was associated with turnover intention after controlling for demographic factors. Among teachers with aggressive and violent students, aggression frequency was linked to higher distress and burnout, while severity was associated with only burnout. Neither student network density nor racial similarity influenced these outcomes. Both stress and burnout were associated with teachers' turnover intentions. Implications for research, practice, and policy regarding teacher victimization were discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":74763,"journal":{"name":"School psychology (Washington, D.C.)","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tracing silent struggles: Examining the characteristics and correlates of teacher victimization through egocentric network analysis.\",\"authors\":\"Ella Rho, Chunyan Yang\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/spq0000699\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>A growing body of research has focused on teacher victimization, examining its prevalence and effects. However, no study has yet used network theory to examine the impact of teachers' networks with aggressive and violent students on psychological distress, burnout, and turnover intentions. Addressing this gap, we used egocentric network analysis and path analysis to explore (a) the structure (e.g., centrality, density) and characteristics (e.g., racial homophily, severity, frequency) of networks comprising aggressive and violent students and (b) their impacts on teacher psychological distress and burnout, subsequently influencing turnover intention. Five hundred and seven K-12 teachers were recruited from 42 U.S. states using snowball sampling, who collectively reported 1,703 aggressive or violent students. On average, each teacher experienced victimization from three different students. We found no tendency for those students to share racial or ethnic backgrounds with their victimized teachers. The network was also found to be not highly interconnected, pointing to individualized rather than group-based aggression and violence. Path analysis showed that teachers' network centrality with students exhibiting challenging behaviors was associated with increased psychological distress and burnout, which in turn was associated with turnover intention after controlling for demographic factors. Among teachers with aggressive and violent students, aggression frequency was linked to higher distress and burnout, while severity was associated with only burnout. Neither student network density nor racial similarity influenced these outcomes. Both stress and burnout were associated with teachers' turnover intentions. Implications for research, practice, and policy regarding teacher victimization were discussed. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
越来越多的研究集中在教师受害问题上,调查其普遍性和影响。然而,目前还没有研究使用网络理论来检验教师与攻击性和暴力学生的网络对心理困扰、倦怠和离职意向的影响。为了解决这一差距,我们使用自我中心网络分析和路径分析来探索(a)由攻击性和暴力学生组成的网络的结构(如中心性、密度)和特征(如种族同质性、严重性、频率),以及(b)它们对教师心理困扰和倦怠的影响,进而影响离职意向。采用滚雪球抽样的方法从美国42个州招募了557名K-12教师,他们总共报告了1703名有攻击性或暴力的学生。平均而言,每个老师都经历过来自三个不同学生的伤害。我们发现这些学生没有倾向于与他们受害的老师分享种族或民族背景。该网络还被发现不是高度相互关联的,这表明攻击和暴力是个体化的,而不是基于群体的。通径分析显示,教师对具有挑战性行为的学生的网络中心性与心理困扰和倦怠增加有关,在控制人口统计学因素后,心理困扰和倦怠增加又与离职倾向相关。在有攻击性和暴力学生的教师中,攻击频率与较高的痛苦和倦怠有关,而严重程度仅与倦怠有关。学生网络密度和种族相似性都没有影响这些结果。压力和倦怠都与教师离职意向有关。讨论了对教师受害的研究、实践和政策的影响。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Tracing silent struggles: Examining the characteristics and correlates of teacher victimization through egocentric network analysis.
A growing body of research has focused on teacher victimization, examining its prevalence and effects. However, no study has yet used network theory to examine the impact of teachers' networks with aggressive and violent students on psychological distress, burnout, and turnover intentions. Addressing this gap, we used egocentric network analysis and path analysis to explore (a) the structure (e.g., centrality, density) and characteristics (e.g., racial homophily, severity, frequency) of networks comprising aggressive and violent students and (b) their impacts on teacher psychological distress and burnout, subsequently influencing turnover intention. Five hundred and seven K-12 teachers were recruited from 42 U.S. states using snowball sampling, who collectively reported 1,703 aggressive or violent students. On average, each teacher experienced victimization from three different students. We found no tendency for those students to share racial or ethnic backgrounds with their victimized teachers. The network was also found to be not highly interconnected, pointing to individualized rather than group-based aggression and violence. Path analysis showed that teachers' network centrality with students exhibiting challenging behaviors was associated with increased psychological distress and burnout, which in turn was associated with turnover intention after controlling for demographic factors. Among teachers with aggressive and violent students, aggression frequency was linked to higher distress and burnout, while severity was associated with only burnout. Neither student network density nor racial similarity influenced these outcomes. Both stress and burnout were associated with teachers' turnover intentions. Implications for research, practice, and policy regarding teacher victimization were discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).