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Posted
November, 2009
Persistent
versus Periodic Social Victimization as Predictors of
Adjustment
Children
may experience various forms of bullying over various
periods. The term "social victimization" refers
to behaviors that are intended to harm the victims'
social status, relationships, or self-esteem. Among
school children, such behaviors include social exclusion,
malicious gossip, and friendship manipulation. Experiences
of social victimization have been found to be associated
with various signs of maladjustment. In a study designed
to compare effects of chronic social victimization with
effects of shorter-term victimization, Rosen et al.
(2009) obtained self-reports of seven aspects of social
victimization from 153 children when they were in grades
4 through 7. Latent class analysis was used to identify
groups who reported high levels of social victimization
in at least three grades (chronic group), in
no more than one grade (nonvictims), those who
reported decreasing victimization (decreaser group),
and those who reported increasing victimization (increaser
group). The children's Internalizing problems were
assessed in terms of scores on the Anxious/Depressed,
Withdrawn/Depressed, and Somatic Complaints syndromes
scored from CBCLs completed by parents. Across all groups,
high fourth-grade scores for social victimization significantly
predicted high scores on all three CBCL Internalizing
syndromes 4 years later, when the children were in seventh
grade. Moreover, the chronic group obtained high scores
on the CBCL syndromes across the entire period, with
high scores being most persistent on the CBCL Withdrawn/Depressed
syndrome. The decreaser group showed decreasing scores
on the Somatic Complaints syndrome but not on the Anxious/Depressed
or Withdrawn/Depressed syndromes. This indicated that
depressive problems persisted in this group, despite
the decline in Somatic Complaints. The increaser group
did not show significant increases in problems by seventh
grade, although it is possible that increases might
have occurred later. As no significant gender effects
were found, the data did not support the authors' hypothesis
that girls would be more affected by social victimization
than boys. Although the overall results indicated rather
complex associations between experiences of victimization
and parent-reported problems, they clearly demonstrated
that chronic victimization over the 4-year transition
to junior high school was associated with persistent
problems reported by parents.
Reference:
Rosen, L.H., Underwood, M.K., Beron, K.J., Gentsch,
J.K., Wharton, M.E., & Rahdar, A. (2009). Persistent
versus periodic experiences of social victimization:
Predictors of adjustment. Journal of Abnormal Child
Psychology, 37, 693-704.
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