Bullying and victimization of primary school children in England and Germany: Prevalence and school factors

Abstract

Differences in denitions and methodologies for assessing bullying in primary school children between countries have precluded direct comparisons of prevalence rates and school factors related to bullying.A total of 2377 children in England (6-year-olds/Year 2: 1072; 8-year-olds/Year 4: 1305) and 1538 in Germany (8-year-olds/Year 2) were questioned individually using an identical standard interview. In both countries the types of bullying to victimize others were similar: boys were most often perpetrators, most bullies were also victims (bully/victims), most bullying occurred in playgrounds and the classroom, and SES and ethnicity only showed weak associationswith bullying behaviour. Major differences were found in victimization rates with 24 % of English pupils becoming victims every week compared with only 8 % in Germany. In contrast, fewer boys in England engaged every week in bullying (2.5–4.5%) than German boys (7.5%), while no differences were found between girls. In England, children in smaller classes were more often victimized. Further study of the group of bully/victims, schooling differences in England vs. Germany and implications for prevention of bullying are discussed. Bullying has attracted a great deal of both research and media interest in most industrialized countries (Smith et al., 1999) since the rst systematic description an

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

CiteSeerX

redirect
Last time updated on 29/10/2017

This paper was published in CiteSeerX.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.