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Journal Article

Citation

Vaillancourt T, Brittain H, Bennett L, Arnocky S, McDougall P, Hymel S, Short K, Sunderani S, Scott C, Mackenzie M, Cunningham L. Can. J. Sch. Psychol. 2010; 25(1): 40-54.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0829573509358686

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Students’ perceptions of school safety and experiences with bullying were examined in a large Canadian cohort of 5,493 girls and 5,659 boys in Grades 4 to 12. Results indicate notable differences in when and where students felt safe based on their own perceptions of safety and their own experiences with bullying, particularly across elementary and secondary schools. For elementary students, especially those involved in bullying, the playground/school yard and outside recess/break time were particularly hazardous, whereas for secondary students involved in bullying, the hallways, school lunchroom/cafeteria, and outside recess/break were considered especially dangerous. The commonality across student-identified unsafe areas is that they tend to not be well supervised by school personnel. Accordingly, the present results underscore the need to increase adult supervision in areas in which an overwhelming majority of students report feeling unsafe.

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