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Good and evil at school: Bullying and moral evaluation in early adolescence
18
Citations
27
References
2014
Year
Psychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyEmpathyEducationEarly AdolescenceVictimisationPsychologySocial SciencesChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSchool PsychologyBullyingAdolescent PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentHypothetical DefenderBullying PreventionMoral PsychologySchool ViolenceMoral EvaluationChild DevelopmentHypothetical BullyingProsocial BehaviorAggression
We investigated how adolescents (sixth-graders, N = 357) morally evaluated hypothetical bullying and defending protagonists and whether these evaluations related to behavior in bullying as nominated by peers. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) resulted in four factors for the evaluation of the hypothetical bullies: Evil soul, Contempt, Cowardice, and Deviance, and five factors for the evaluation of the hypothetical defender: General admiration, Courage, Cool, Empathic care, and Fair justice. Corresponding scales were constructed. The findings showed that bullying positively correlated with evaluating the hypothetical bullies using Cowardice while victimization positively correlated with evaluating the hypothetical defender in terms of General admiration, Empathic care, and Fair justice. MANOVA for each of the two sets of the evaluative scales indicated that behavioral status (bully, victim, defender, or uninvolved) had a significant effect on the moral evaluation of hypothetical bullies, and no significant effect on the moral evaluation of the hypothetical defender.
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