Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Objective: Although bullying is traditionally considered within the context of primary and secondary school, recent evidence suggests that bullying continues into college and workplace settings. Participants/Method: Latent class analysis (LCA) was employed to classify college bullying involvement typologies among 325 college students attending a northeastern university.

Results: Four classes concerning bullying involvement were revealed: Non-involved (36%); Instructor victim (30%); Peer bully-victim (22%); and Peer bully-victim/ Instructor victim (12%).

Conclusions: Findings from this study, which classified college bullying experiences by incorporating both peer and instructor (teacher and professor) bullying, add substantially to the literature by providing insight into patterns of relatively unexplored bullying behaviors.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7418861PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07448481.2018.1454926DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bullying
8
college students
8
latent class
8
class analysis
8
college bullying
8
bullying involvement
8
instructor victim
8
college
5
instructor
4
instructor peer
4

Similar Publications

The risk and impact of family violence on the intergenerational transmission of school bullying among Chinese children and adolescents.

Child Abuse Negl

September 2025

Beijing Huilongguan Hospital, Beijing, China; Peking University Huilongguan Clinical Medical School, Beijing, China; WHO Collaborating Center for Research and Training in Suicide Prevention, Beijing, China. Electronic address:

Background: Family violence-comprising both child maltreatment and interparental violence-is a pervasive global public-health concern that disproportionately affects children and adolescents. In China, current and nationally representative prevalence estimates remain scarce, impeding evidence-based prevention.

Objective: This study examines the prevalence and consequences of witnessing only, experiencing only, and concurrently witnessing and experiencing family violence among Chinese children and adolescents, with a specific focus on school bullying.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Students experiencing victimization and those bullying others may develop subsequent sleep problems and vice versa. The existing meta-analyses have focused only on cross-sectional associations or longitudinal links from victimization to sleep problems. Therefore, this study systematically reviewed the literature and conducted a meta-analysis of cross-sectional and bidirectional longitudinal associations between victimization or bullying and sleep problems in children and adolescents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: We aimed to examine the impact of cyberbullying and off-campus cyberbullying provisions in state anti-bullying laws on cyberbullying and whether the effects varied by sexual minority status.

Methods: Using data from the 2011-2021 Youth Risk Behavior Surveys (911,086 high school students in 44 states in the United States), we estimated difference-in-differences logistic regression models. Policies were categorized into three types: "strong" (including cyberbullying and off-campus provisions); "moderate" (cyberbullying provisions only); or "neither" (neither provision).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anti-bullying, smart and sharp.

Paediatr Child Health

August 2025

Key Laboratory of Environmental Medicine Engineering, Ministry of Education, School of Public Health, Southeast University, Nanjing, China.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF