TY - JOUR PY - 2008// TI - Relations among school connectedness, hope, life satisfaction, and bully victimization JO - Psychology in the schools A1 - You, Sukkyung A1 - Furlong, Michael J. A1 - Felix, Erika D. A1 - Sharkey, Jill D. A1 - Tanigawa, Diane A1 - Green, Jennifer Greif SP - 446 EP - 460 VL - 45 IS - 5 N2 - This study investigates the role of school connectedness in mediating the relation between students' sense of hope and life satisfaction for three groups: Bullied Victims, Peer Victims, and Nonvictims. Students in grades 5 to 12 (N = 866) completed the California Bully/Victim Scale, School Connectedness Scale, Children's Hope Scale, and Students' Life Satisfaction Scale. Multigroup latent mean analysis revealed significant group mean differences in hope, school connectedness, and life satisfaction, supporting our bullying classification. Multigroup structural model analysis showed differential patterns between hope, school connectedness, and life satisfaction. Specifically, school connectedness partially mediated the relation between hope and life satisfaction for the Nonvictims only. The effect of hope on school connectedness was stronger for the Bullied Victims than the Nonvictims, and the effect of hope on life satisfaction was stronger for the Peer Victims and Bullied Victims than the Nonvictims group. Implications for research and practice are discussed. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
LA - SN - 0033-3085 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pits.20308 ID - ref1 ER -