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Pathways from School Bullying to Adult Aggression: A Longitudinal Study

Homel, Jacqueline Beatrice

Description

This study identifies developmental processes underlying the relationship between school bullying and physical aggression in emergent adulthood. The data are drawn from the ‘Life at School’ project, a longitudinal study of schooling, socio-emotional functioning, and bullying in a sample of young people living in the Australian Capital Territory. This study consists of three waves of self-report data collected from 88 females and 63 males (N=151) during primary school (Time 1), high school (Time...[Show more]

dc.contributor.authorHomel, Jacqueline Beatrice
dc.date.accessioned2010-09-06T05:51:41Z
dc.date.accessioned2011-01-04T02:34:08Z
dc.date.available2010-09-06T05:51:41Z
dc.date.available2011-01-04T02:34:08Z
dc.identifier.otherb24445757
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/49361
dc.description.abstractThis study identifies developmental processes underlying the relationship between school bullying and physical aggression in emergent adulthood. The data are drawn from the ‘Life at School’ project, a longitudinal study of schooling, socio-emotional functioning, and bullying in a sample of young people living in the Australian Capital Territory. This study consists of three waves of self-report data collected from 88 females and 63 males (N=151) during primary school (Time 1), high school (Time 2) and emerging adulthood (Time 3). The study extends earlier analyses to consider the relative significance of distal functioning and the proximal effects of heavy drinking and work/study roles during the transition to emerging adulthood in shaping pathways from school bullying to adult aggression. … The analyses show that the expression of bullying and adult physical aggression is flexible, open at each stage of development to influence from personal resources (e.g., capacity for adaptive shame management), social resources (e.g., parental education), and changing institutional settings, through for example the cultural and behavioural norms that characterise the university, workplace, and drinking environments and which constrain aggressive behaviour or promote a sense of future orientation. Patterns of adult aggressive behaviours are thus shaped not just by past bullying, but by the subtle interplay of emergent adult settings and experiences, socio-emotional functioning in school contexts, and family social capital.
dc.language.isoen
dc.rights.uriThe Australian National University
dc.subjectaggression, bullying, developmental psychopathology, developmental psychology, socioemotional development, school adjustment, alcohol, drinking, longitudinal, emotion regulation, emerging adulthood
dc.titlePathways from School Bullying to Adult Aggression: A Longitudinal Study
dc.typeThesis (PhD)
dcterms.valid2010
local.description.refereedyes
local.type.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
dc.date.issued2009
local.contributor.affiliationRegulatory Institutions Network, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific
local.contributor.affiliationThe Australian National University
local.identifier.doi10.25911/5d7a2d3210779
local.mintdoimint
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