| Literature DB >> 25231901 |
Charles E Cunningham1, Yvonne Chen1, Tracy Vaillancourt2, Heather Rimas1, Ken Deal3, Lesley J Cunningham4, Jenna Ratcliffe5.
Abstract
Adaptive choice-based conjoint analysis was used to study the anti-cyberbullying program preferences of 1,004 university students. More than 60% reported involvement in cyberbullying as witnesses (45.7%), victims (5.7%), perpetrator-victims (4.9%), or perpetrators (4.5%). Men were more likely to report involvement as perpetrators and perpetrator-victims than were women. Students recommended advertisements featuring famous people who emphasized the impact of cyberbullying on victims. They preferred a comprehensive approach teaching skills to prevent cyberbullying, encouraging students to report incidents, enabling anonymous online reporting, and terminating the internet privileges of students involved as perpetrators. Those who cyberbully were least likely, and victims of cyberbullying were most likely, to support an approach combining prevention and consequences. Simulations introducing mandatory reporting, suspensions, or police charges predicted a substantial reduction in the support of uninvolved students, witnesses, victims, and perpetrators.Entities:
Keywords: internet; relationships
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25231901 DOI: 10.1002/ab.21560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aggress Behav ISSN: 0096-140X Impact factor: 2.917