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A meta-analysis of longitudinal partial correlations between school violence and mental health, school performance, and criminal or delinquent acts

Authors :
Alberto Valido
Elizabeth Spinney
Joshua R. Polanin
America J. El Sheikh
Katherine M. Ingram
Jennifer K. Grotpeter
Cagil Torgal
Dorothy L. Espelage
Luz E. Robinson
Source :
Psychological Bulletin. 147:115-133
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2021.

Abstract

The daily challenges resulting from all types of school violence-such as physical aggression, bullying, peer victimization, and general threats-have the potential to affect, longitudinally, students' mental health, school performance, and involvement in criminal or delinquent acts. Across primary and secondary studies, however, variation in how and how much school violence relates to these outcomes, has persisted. The purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis, therefore, was to clarify this uncertainty by synthesizing the longitudinal relations. We conducted exhaustive searching procedures, implemented rigorous screening and coding processes, and estimated an underused effect size, the partial correlation from multiple regression models, before estimating a random-effects meta-analysis using robust variance estimation. We meta-analyzed 114 independent studies, totaling 765 effect sizes across 95,618 individual participants. The results of the overall analyses found a statistically significant longitudinal relation between school violence, in any role, and the aggregated outcome variables (rp = .06). Given that this effect size inherently controls for multiple potential confounding covariates, we consider the relation's magnitude clinically meaningful. We end by discussing ways practitioners and researchers may use these analyses when implementing prevention programming and how the field of meta-analysis should more frequently utilize the partial correlation. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Details

ISSN :
19391455 and 00332909
Volume :
147
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f8e741a2ad98f6093b1feb85fa0d711
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000314