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Associations between School-Wide Practices and School-Wide Bullying: Advancing the Cross-Country Understanding of Teachers' Perspectives from the U.S. and China

Authors :
Chunyan Yang
Quennie Dong
Ella Rho
Zhaojun Teng
Source :
School Psychology. 2024 39(2):213-223.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

To understand the role of different school-wide practices in school-wide bullying prevention in the global context, this present study was guided by the social-ecological framework to examine cross-country similarities and differences in the association between three forms of school-wide practices (i.e., punitive, positive, and social and emotional learning [SEL] practices) and school-wide bullying between United States (n = 1,833) and Chinese (n = 1,627) teachers from middle and high schools. Measurement invariance tests confirmed that the associations between the three forms of school-wide practices and school-wide bullying were comparable across the two countries. Results of multilevel analyses suggested that more frequent positive practices at the between-school level were associated with increased school-wide bullying in the United States but decreased school-wide bullying in the Chinese. Also, more frequent punitive practices at the within-school level were associated with increased school-wide bullying in both the U.S. and Chinese samples, and this positive association between punitive practices and school-wide bullying was significantly stronger in the Chinese sample than in the U.S. sample. More frequent punitive practices at the between-school level were also associated with increased school-wide bullying in the U.S. sample, but not in the Chinese sample. Moreover, the frequent SEL practices at the within-school level were significantly associated with decreased school-wide bullying in the United States, but not in China; the frequent SEL practices at the between-school level were associated with decreased school-wide bullying in the United States but increased school-wide bullying in China. Implications for school-wide practices in bullying prevention and intervention with sociocultural considerations were discussed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2578-4218 and 2578-4226
Volume :
39
Issue :
2
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
School Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1419028
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/spq0000557