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Original Article

Teachers' perspectives on effective responses to overt bullying

Nicole Sokol

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: nicole.sokol@mq.edu.au

Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, , Sydney, Australia

Corresponding author: Nicole Sokol, Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia. E‐mail:

nicole.sokol@mq.edu.au

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Kay Bussey

Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, , Sydney, Australia

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Ronald M. Rapee

Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, , Sydney, Australia

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First published: 22 June 2016
Cited by: 4

Abstract

School communities worldwide are tackling the pervasive problem of school bullying. Teachers hold an important responsibility to prevent and manage bullying problems in the school environment and often play a key role in advising students about how to respond to bullying. This study examined teachers' perspectives on the most effective ways to respond to overt bullying. Australian primary and secondary school teachers (= 289; Mean age = 41.22 years, 59 males) completed online questionnaires about four hypothetical videotaped scenarios portraying different victim responses (angry, sad, confident, ignoring) to physical or verbal bullying. Qualitative measures assessing teachers' recommendations to victims about how to respond to bullying and the rationales underlying their suggested approaches were also obtained. Teachers considered confident and ignoring victim responses to be more effective than sad and angry responses. Furthermore, sad victims were perceived to be at greatest risk of future victimisation, while confident victims were considered to be at lowest risk. Teachers reported a broad range of victim response recommendations and rationales that at times varied depending on the type of bullying but did not differ according to students' gender. Understanding teachers' views about effective victim responding may inform professional education programmes aimed at guiding teachers in how best to support and advise victims of bullying.

Number of times cited: 4

  • , Mentoring of Pre-Service Teachers, Mentorship Strategies in Teacher Education, 10.4018/978-1-5225-4050-2.ch001, (1-18)
  • , Preventing School Bullying: Investigation of the Link between Anti‐Bullying Strategies, Prevention Ownership, Prevention Climate, and Prevention Leadership, Applied Psychology, 66, 4, (577-598), (2017).
  • , The retrospective (im)moralization of self-plagiarism: Power interests in the social construction of new norms for publishing, Organization, (135050841773492), (2017).
  • , Teachers’ Intervention in School Bullying: A Qualitative Analysis on Italian Teachers, Frontiers in Education, 2, (2017).