Authors
Dorothy Espelage, Harold Green, Joshua Polanin
Publication date
2012/12
Journal
The Journal of Early Adolescence
Volume
32
Issue
6
Pages
776-801
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
This study examined the associations among gender, empathy, attitudes toward bullying, willingness to intervene, and bullying within peer groups in a sample of sixth and seventh-grade students (N = 346; M Age = 12.22 years). Peer groups were identified via social network analysis using NEGOPY (Richards, 1995) and peer-group predictors were evaluated with multilevel modeling. Male peer-group willingness to intervene results indicated significant between-group variation (i.e., high ICC). Perspective-taking was associated with greater willingness to intervene within male peer groups after controlling for initial levels of willingness to intervene. Greater bullying perpetration within one’s peer group was highly predictive of less individual willingness to intervene. For females, willingness to intervene scores was not dependent on friendship group. This study suggests that bullying prevention programs that …
Total citations
2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024612173020192425251819116