欺凌中断:在 COVID-19 大流行期间,远程教育中的受害学生。

Juuso Repo, Sanna Herkama, Christina Salmivalli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们调查了在 COVID-19 大流行期间向远程教育的过渡如何影响小学和初中学生的欺凌受害率,并分析了特定学生群体(即以前受害的学生)如何经历远程教育。为期 2 个月的学校停课为我们提供了一个独特的环境,以探讨互联网使用的增加与网络欺凌之间的关联,并在新的背景下反思传统欺凌与网络欺凌之间的重叠。主要样本(n = 34 771)由 10-16 岁的芬兰学生组成,他们在 2020 年春季远程教育期间回答了一项在线调查。该样本还得到了2019年(n=43216)和2017年(n=24727)在同一所学校进行的前两次调查数据的补充。在学校封锁期间,所有年级的欺凌受害率都大幅下降。物理隔离和学生互联网使用的激增似乎并没有导致网络欺凌的增加。停课前受害学生对远程教育时间的评价比预期的更积极:他们对学校的好感度相对较高,老师对他们的支持也比其他学生多。受害学生与未受害学生在学校适应方面的原有差距不仅没有扩大,反而出人意料地缩小了。我们的研究结果凸显了这样一种观点,即打击欺凌行为的主要途径是学校中的人际交往。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Bullying Interrupted: Victimized Students in Remote Schooling During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Bullying Interrupted: Victimized Students in Remote Schooling During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Bullying Interrupted: Victimized Students in Remote Schooling During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

We investigated how the transition to remote schooling during the COVID-19 pandemic affected the rates of bullying victimization among students in primary and lower secondary education and analyzed how a specific group of students, namely previously victimized students experienced remote schooling. The 2-month school lockdown offered a unique setting to explore the association between increasing Internet use and cyberbullying and reflect on the overlap between traditional bullying and cyberbullying in a new context. The main sample (n = 34 771) consisted of 10-16-year-old Finnish students who responded to an online survey during the remote schooling period in spring 2020. The sample was supplemented with data from two previous surveys conducted in the same schools in 2019 (n = 43,216) and in 2017 (n = 24,727). The prevalence of bullying victimization decreased substantially in all grade levels during the school lockdown. Physical isolation and surge in students' Internet use did not seem to lead to an increase in cyberbullying. Before-lockdown victimized students evaluated the time in remote schooling more positively than expected: they reported relatively high school liking and more teacher support than other students. The pre-existing gap in school adjustment between victimized and non-victimized students did not increase, but surprisingly, decreased. Our results highlight the notion that the main arena to fight bullying is within in-person interactions in schools.

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