Male and Female Victims of Male Bullies: Social Status Differences by Gender and Informant Source

被引:0
|
作者
Christian Berger
Philip C. Rodkin
机构
[1] Facultad de Psicología,Universidad Alberto Hurtado
[2] College of Education,Department of Educational Psychology
[3] University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,undefined
来源
Sex Roles | 2009年 / 61卷
关键词
Victimization; Social status; Gender differences; Informant source;
D O I
暂无
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学科分类号
摘要
We examine two sources of variation in victims’ social adjustment: (a) the informant who identifies a child as victim (i.e., peer, self, or both), and (b) victim gender. Peer and self nominations were provided by 508 fourth and fifth graders from the Midwest U.S. Girls were more likely than boys to be victimized, and victims were evenly distributed among informant source. Self-nominated female victims had lower social status and were involved in more antipathies than their peer-nominated counterparts. Among boys, self-and-peer reported victims had the lowest social status. Having friends was associated with positive social adjustment. Implications are discussed for at-risk victim subgroups: girls whose self-reports of victimization are not validated by others, and boys whose victimization is publicly acknowledged.
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页码:72 / 84
页数:12
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