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Journal Article

Citation

van der Ploeg R, Steglich C, Salmivalli C, Veenstra R. PLoS One 2015; 10(10): e0141490.

Affiliation

Department of Sociology, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Public Library of Science)

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0141490

PMID

26513576

Abstract

The association between experienced victimization and students' psychological and social adjustment depends on the intensity of victimization. We examined how frequency and multiplicity of victimization, and the number of bullies involved, account for differences in students' psychosocial well-being and social standing in the classroom. Multilevel analyses were conducted on the control group of an intervention study among students in grades 3-6 of Dutch elementary schools (N = 2859 students from 124 classes and 33 schools; ages 8-12; 49.6% boys). It was found that victims of frequent and multiple victimization, and victims who were victimized by several bullies, had higher levels of psychosocial adjustment problems than victims of less frequent and non-multiple victimization, and victims with only one bully. Moreover, these more severe victims turned out to be least accepted and most rejected among their classmates. The findings illustrate that it can be fruitful to use several measures of victimization so that (differences in) adjustment problems can be better understood. Moreover, the results suggest that it is important to find out who is victimized, in what ways, and by whom. Anti-bullying interventions should provide resources to do this.


Language: en

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