| Literature DB >> 32945211 |
Arto Gråstén1,2, Marja Kokkonen1.
Abstract
This study examined relationships between teachers' perceptions of verbal and non-verbal sexual harassment and physical violence against teachers and among students in physical education (PE). Participants were 175 (females 122, males 53) Finnish PE teachers between 27 and 62 years (M = 44.8 ± 9.2 years). The cross-sectional data were collected by an anonymous online survey in the fall semester 2018. The findings showed that (a) higher levels of verbal sexual harassment and physical violence among students were associated with higher levels of equivalent types of violence against PE teachers, (b) higher levels of verbal and non-verbal sexual harassment among students were associated with higher levels of physical assaults among students, whereas only non-verbal sexual harassment was associated with physical violence against teachers, and (c) verbal sexual harassment and physical violence among students occurred more frequently in PE classes instructed by less experienced teachers. The results indicated that to prevent both teacher- and student-directed verbal sexual harassment and physical violence in school PE, special attention could be given to the positive development of student-student relationships.Entities:
Keywords: harassment; interpersonal; non-verbal; school; verbal; victimization
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32945211 PMCID: PMC8980454 DOI: 10.1177/0886260520959640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interpers Violence ISSN: 0886-2605
Figure 1.The theorized model including covariables, verbal sexual harassment, non-verbal sexual harassment, and physical violence against teachers and among students in PE classes (y1–y13 = observed variables). For the sake of clarity, associations between verbal, non-verbal sexual harassment, and physical violence are not illustrated.
Participant Demographics (N = 175).
| Quantity | Percentage | Verbal Sexual Harassment against Teachers | Verbal Sexual Harassment among Students | Non-verbal Sexual Harassment against Teachers | Non-verbal Sexual Harassment among Students | Physical Violence against Teachers | Physical Violence among Students | |
| Gender | ||||||||
|
Female Male |
12 253 |
69.7 30.3 |
1.25 (.27) 1.26 (.28) |
1.64 (.58) 1.69 (.57) |
1.10 (.26) 1.14 (.35) |
1.61 (.74) 1.60 (.75) |
1.04 (.20) 1.02 (.14) |
2.46 (1.10) 2.36 (1.08) |
| Region | ||||||||
|
Uusimaa Pirkanmaa Southwest Finland Central Finland North Ostrobothnia Other |
52 18 17 16 11 61 |
29.9 10.3 9.8 9.2 6.3 34.5 |
1.31 (.32) 1.27 (.34) 1.22 (.23) 1.17 (.24) 1.27 (.31) 1.25 (.23) |
1.73 (.55) 1.59 (.55) 1.64 (.69) 1.40 (.42) 1.55 (.47) 1.74 (.65) |
1.10 (.24) 1.14 (.41) 1.09 (.26) 1.07 (.26) 1.23 (.41) 1.12 (.28) |
1.63 (.64) 1.42 (.52) 1.88 (1.15) 1.30 (.49) 1.68 (.56) 1.65 (.83) |
1.08 (.27) 1.06 (.24) 1.00 (.00) 1.00 (.00) 1.00 (.00) 1.03 (.18) |
2.40 (1.07) 2.50 (1.15) 3.12 (1.05) 1.94 (.68) 2.36 (1.21) 2.43 (1.13) |
| Teaching level | ||||||||
|
Elementary 1–6 Middle school 7–9 High school Vocational school Higher education Elementary + Middle school 1–9 Middle school 7–9 + High school |
9 64 25 4 2 15 56 |
5.1 36.6 14.3 2.3 1.1 8.6 32.0 |
1.21 (.26) 1.29 (.27) 1.16 (.32) 1.29 (.17) 1.00 (.00) 1.41 (.37) 1.25 (.25) |
1.40 (.45) 1.76 (.56) 1.42 (.50) 1.71 (.48) 1.00 (.00) 1.79 (.56) 1.72 (.61) |
1.11 (.33) 1.13 (.32) 1.00 (.00) 1.30 (.45) 1.00 (.00) 1.27 (.42) 1.09 (.24) |
1.50 (.71) 1.67 (.76) 1.36 (.62) 1.20 (.27) 1.00 (.00) 1.63 (.55) 1.74 (.80) |
1.22 (.44) 1.03 (.18) 1.00 (.00) 1.00 (.00) 1.00 (.00) 1.07 (.26) 1.02 (.14) |
2.56 (.88) 2.66 (.98) 1.48 (.51) 2.00 (.00) 1.00 (.00) 3.00 (1.00) 2.52 (1.17) |
| Teaching experience | ||||||||
|
1–5 years 6–10 years 11–15 years 15 years |
30 27 38 80 |
17.0 15.0 22.0 46.0 |
1.33 (.24) 1.30 (.40) 1.24 (.27) 1.23 (.25) |
1.82 (.60) 1.69 (.66) 1.60 (.63) 1.63 (.54) |
1.20 (.34) 1.12 (.29) 1.11 (.31) 1.08 (.25) |
1.73 (.88) 1.65 (.88) 1.59 (.81) 1.57 (.63) |
1.07 (.25) 1.04 (.20) 1.08 (.27) 1.01 (.11) |
2.80 (1.06) 2.59 (1.34) 2.50 (1.16) 2.21 (.95) |
Note. Means and standard deviations (in the parentheses) for each group are presented in vertical columns.
Correlations, Means (M), Standard Deviations (SD), and Composite Reliability (CR) of the Study Variables.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
|
| CR | |
| Against teacher | |||||||||
| 1 Non-verbal sexual harassment | – | – | – | – | – | – | 1.09 | 0.25 | 0.75 |
| 2 Verbal sexual harassment | 0.31*** | – | – | – | – | – | 1.09 | 0.28 | 0.83 |
| 3 Physical violence | 0.23** | 0.40*** | – | – | – | – | 1.04 | 0.20 | – |
| Among students | |||||||||
| 4 Non-verbal sexual harassment | 0.24** | 0.38*** | 0.36*** | – | – | – | 1.62 | 0.75 | 0.75 |
| 5 Verbal sexual harassment | 0.32*** | 0.45*** | 0.35*** | 0.68*** | – | – | 2.01 | 0.79 | 0.83 |
| 6 Physical violence | 0.22** | 0.28*** | 0.30*** | 0.46*** | 0.62*** | – | 2.43 | 1.10 | – |
Note. ***p < .001. **p < .01. [AQ-2: Significance of “*” has been given in Table 2, but “*” is not present in the table. Please check.]
Figure 2.Standardized results of path analysis for verbal sexual harassment, non-verbal sexual harassment, and physical violence against teachers and among students in PE classes (y1–y13 = observed variables). All paths are significant at p < .05 level.