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Journal Article

Citation

Boulton MJ, Murphy D, Lloyd J, Besling S, Coote J, Lewis J, Perrin R, Walsh L. Br. Educ. Res. J. 2013; 39(2): 209-221.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1080/01411926.2011.627420

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Despite possible negative effects, many children do not tell their teachers when they have been bullied. This study examined junior school pupils' ("N" = 294) reports of instrumental, emotional and validation social support received after disclosing being bullied to teachers, and associations with intentions to disclose in the future. Overall, participants reported receiving modest to high levels of social support. The three social support variables accounted for a significant proportion (16.3%) of the variance in intentions to disclose. Each of them also emerged as significant non unique predictors (i.e. not controlling for their shared variance), and validation social support did so even after controlling for the influence of the other two types. These effects were stronger for boys than for girls, and some varied by age.

FINDINGS are discussed in terms of outcome- expectancy theory and practical implications.


Language: en

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