| Literature DB >> 31555177 |
Abstract
Bullying research has traditionally been dominated by largescale cohort studies focusing on the personality traits of bullies and victims. These studies focus on bullying prevalence, risk and protective factors, and negative outcomes. A limitation of this approach is that it does not explain why bullying happens. Qualitative research can help shed light on these factors. This paper discusses the findings from four mainly qualitative research projects including a systematic review and three empirical studies involving young people to various degrees within the research process as respondents, co-researchers and commissioners of research. Much quantitative research suggests that young people are a homogenous group and through the use of surveys and other large scale methods, generalizations can be drawn about how bullying is understood and how it can be dealt with. Findings from the studies presented in this paper, add to our understanding that young people appear particularly concerned about the role of wider contextual and relational factors in deciding if bullying has happened. These studies underscore the relational aspects of definitions of bullying and, how the dynamics of young people's friendships can shift what is understood as bullying or not. Moreover, to appreciate the relational and social contexts underpinning bullying behaviors, adults and young people need to work together on bullying agendas and engage with multiple definitions, effects and forms of support. Qualitative methodologies, in particular participatory research opens up the complexities of young lives and enables these insights to come to the fore. Through this approach, effective supports can be designed based on what young people want and need rather than those interpreted as supportive through adult understanding.Entities:
Keywords: bullying; bullying supports; collaboration; participatory research; social constructionism; young people; young people as researchers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31555177 PMCID: PMC6722199 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
The studies.
| Study 1 | Secondary school teachers’ and pupils’ definitions of bullying in the United Kingdom: a systematic review | Systematic Review | Systematic literature review of five papers: Two quantitative studies One mixed methods study One qualitative study One quantitative study with a qualitative aspect | 3,283 pupils, 225 teachers | Study sits to the far left of the continuum, as young people were not directly involved as “active respondents” but their views were heard through secondary data analysis. | Thematic Analysis, | ||
| Study 2 | The impact of cyber-bullying on young people’s mental health | Participatory Research | Online questionnaire (open questions), focus groups | 490 young people and responses from 11 schools | Study shifts between the middle of the continuum: “students as co-researchers” and right: “students as researchers” | Thematic Analysis, | ||
| Study 3 | To “Snitch” or Not to “Snitch”? Using PAR to Explore Bullying in a Private Day and Boarding School. | Participatory Action Research (PAR) | Online questionnaire (open questions), focus groups, student led interviews, paper questionnaires | 155 students, 135 parents, 12 school staff members | Study shifts between the middle of the continuum: “students as co-researchers” and right: “students as researchers” | Thematic Analysis, | ||
| Study 4 | An exploratory study of bullied young people’s self-exclusion from school | Qualitative research | Interviews | 4 young people, 2 parents | Study sits to the left of the continuum, as young people were involved as “active respondents” in informing adult understanding of the issue. | Thematic Analysis, |