| Literature DB >> 22194663 |
Sandra K M Tsang1, Eadaoin K P Hui, Bella C M Law.
Abstract
School bullying has become an explicit, burgeoning problem challenging the healthy development of children and adolescents in Hong Kong. Many bullying prevention and intervention programs focus on victims and bullies, with bystanders treated as either nonexistent or irrelevant. This paper asserts that bystanders actually play pivotal roles in deciding whether the bullying process and dynamics are benign or adversarial. Bystanders' own abilities and characteristics often influence how they respond to victims and bullies. "P.A.T.H.S. to Adulthood: A Jockey Club Youth Enhancement Scheme" (P.A.T.H.S. = Positive Adolescent Training through Holistic Social Programmes) is an evidence-based positive youth development program which shows that primary intervention programs have constructive impacts on junior secondary school students' beliefs and behavior. This paper asserts that intrapsychic qualities, namely identity, self-efficacy, and self-determination, greatly influence how bystanders react in school bullying situations. The paper also explains how classroom-based educational programs based on the P.A.T.H.S. model have been designed to help junior secondary school students strengthen these characteristics, so that they can be constructive bystanders when they encounter school bullying.Entities:
Keywords: Bullying; bystander; positive identity; positive youth development; self-determination; self-efficacy
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22194663 PMCID: PMC3236387 DOI: 10.1100/2011/531474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Bullying units overview.
| Unit code/unit Name | Construct | Unit aim | Learning targets | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Secondary 1 | AB1.1 incidents of bullying | Behavioral competence, emotional competence, resilience | To understand what is meant by bullying and its consequences, to avoid being a bully or a victim | (1) To understand the definition of bullying |
| (2) To investigate the behavioral and emotional reactions of the bully, the victim, and bystanders in bullying incidents, and the consequences of bullying | ||||
| AB1.2 behind the mask of bullying | Emotional competence, behavioral competence | To understand the true needs of the bullies and identify proper approaches to minimize bullying | (1) To understand the reasons of bullying and the mentality of the bullies | |
| (2) To identify suitable approaches to fulfill the underlying needs of the bullies in order to reduce bullying | ||||
| AB1.3 a secret book of bullying prevention | Social competence, behavioral competence | To learn what should be done in the face of bullying | To learn dos and don'ts in the face of bullying | |
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| Secondary 2 | AB2.1 I can make a difference | Moral competence, prosocial norm | To understand that bystanders play an important role in bullying | (1) To understand that the “bystander effect” has a significant impact on a person's decisions and behavior |
| (2) To understand that the consequences of a bullying incident vary with the attitudes and responses of the bystanders | ||||
| AB2.2 make a smart move | Moral competence, behavioral competence | To learn to be a wise and responsible bystander | (1) To understand the factors affecting the attitudes and responses of bystanders to bullying incidents | |
| (2) To investigate how to stop school bullying wisely | ||||
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| Secondary 3 | AB3.1 online buddies | Moral competence | To learn to be a responsible bystander in cyber bullying | (1) To know the tremendous harm that cyber-bullying can cause |
| (2) To investigate the proper attitude for bystanders in cyber bullying incidents | ||||
| AB3.2 alien? | Social competence | To learn and practice the motto “seek common ground and respect differences; seek harmony but not uniformity” | (1) To understand that everyone has his/her own limitations and is different from others | |
| (2) To learn to understand, tolerate, and accept those who are different from us | ||||