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Journal Article

Citation

Springer AE, Cuevas Jaramillo MC, Ortiz Gómez Y, Case K, Wilkinson A. Glob. Health Promot. 2015; 23(4): 37-48.

Affiliation

Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living, University of Texas School of Public Health-Austin Regional Campus, Austin, TX United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, International Union for Health Promotion and Education, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1757975915576305

PMID

25878143

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Student-school connectedness is inversely associated with multiple health risk behaviors, yet research is limited on the relative contributions of a student's connectedness with school and an overall context of school social cohesion to peer victimization/bullying.

PURPOSE: We examined associations of perceived school cohesion and student-school connectedness with physical victimization, verbal victimization, and social exclusion in the past six months in adolescents in grades 6-11 (N = 774) attending 11 public and private urban schools in Colombia.

METHODS: Cross-sectional data were collected via a self-administered questionnaire and analyzed using mixed-effects linear regression models.

RESULTS: Higher perceived school cohesion was inversely related with exposure to three bullying types examined (p < 0.05); student-school connectedness was negatively related to verbal victimization among girls only (p < 0.01). In full models, school cohesion maintained inverse associations with three bullying types after controlling for student-school connectedness (p ≤ 0.05).

CONCLUSION: Enhancing school cohesion may hold benefits for bullying prevention beyond a student's individual school connectedness.


Language: en

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