Bullies and Victims in the Peer Ecology: Four Questions for Psychologists and School Professionals

Abstract The purpose of this article is to synthesize recent work on aggression and victimization in educational settings from an ecological perspective. Four questions directed towards school psychologists and bullying researchers guide this review: (a) How do bullies fit into their peer ecologies? (b) How do victims fit into their peer ecologies? (c) How can teachers impact bullying and victimization? (d) How can parents impact bullying and victimization? Our goal is to encourage school service professionals, prevention and intervention researchers, developers of antibullying curricula, and child development researchers to consider the implications of these questions as part of their effort to confront victimization and understand its contextual roots.

[1]  D. G. Perry,et al.  Victims of Peer Aggression. , 1988 .

[2]  D. Pepler,et al.  Observations of aggressive and nonaggressive children on the school playground. , 1998 .

[3]  Donna Eder,et al.  CHILDREN'S PEER CULTURES , 1990 .

[4]  K. Lagerspetz,et al.  Group aggression among school children in three schools , 1982 .

[5]  D. French Heterogeneity of peer-rejected boys: aggressive and nonaggressive subtypes. , 1988, Child development.

[6]  E. V. Hodges,et al.  Victimization by peers: associations with children's reports of mother-child interaction. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  G. S. Pettit,et al.  Early Behavior Problems as a Predictor of Later Peer Group Victimization: Moderators and Mediators in the Pathways of Social Risk , 1999, Journal of abnormal child psychology.

[8]  G. Ladd,et al.  Parenting behaviors and parent-child relationships: correlates of peer victimization in kindergarten? , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[9]  J. Parker,et al.  Describing the dark side of preadolescents' peer experiences: four questions (and data) on preadolescents' enemies. , 2003, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[10]  Anthony D. Pellegrini,et al.  Bullying, Victimization, and Sexual Harassment During the Transition to Middle School , 2002 .

[11]  G. Ladd,et al.  Charting the relationship trajectories of aggressive, withdrawn, and aggressive/withdrawn children during early grade school. , 1999, Child development.

[12]  L. Frank The Society for Research in Child Development , 1935 .

[13]  D. French Heterogeneity of Peer‐rejected Girls , 1990 .

[14]  Skewed autonomy-relatedness in preadolescents' conceptions of their relationships with mother, father, and best friend. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[15]  Lei Chang Variable effects of children's aggression, social withdrawal, and prosocial leadership as functions of teacher beliefs and behaviors. , 2003, Child development.

[16]  Donna Eder,et al.  School Talk: Gender and Adolescent Culture , 1995 .

[17]  M. Sherif Experiments in Group Conflict , 1956, Nature.

[18]  David Henry,et al.  Normative Influences on Aggression in Urban Elementary School Classrooms , 2000, American journal of community psychology.

[19]  S. Fleck Foreword , 1957, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[20]  G. Ladd,et al.  Peer rejection as an antecedent of young children's school adjustment: an examination of mediating processes. , 2001, Developmental psychology.

[21]  K. Rigby Health consequences of bullying and its prevention in schools. , 2001 .

[22]  H. S. Sullivan The interpersonal theory of psychiatry , 1953 .

[23]  Rob Limper Cooperation between parents, teachers, and school boards to prevent bullying in education: An overview of work done in the Netherlands , 2000 .

[24]  W. Bukowski,et al.  Sociometry then and now : building on six decades of measuring children's experiences with the peer group , 1998 .

[25]  W. Damon,et al.  Handbook of child psychology: Social, emotional, and personality development, Vol. 3, 6th ed. , 2006 .

[26]  Peter K. Smith,et al.  Characteristics of victims of school bullying: Developmental changes in coping strategies and skills. , 2001 .

[27]  T. Farmer,et al.  Heterogeneity of popular boys: antisocial and prosocial configurations. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[28]  Ronald Lippitt,et al.  The Dynamics of Power , 1952 .

[29]  D. Schwartz,et al.  Mutual antipathies in the peer group as a moderating factor in the association between community violence exposure and psychosocial maladjustment. , 2003, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[30]  M. Boivin,et al.  Peer status and self-perception among early elementary school children: the case of the rejected children. , 1989, Child development.

[31]  M. Killeen Predicting adolescent peer problems and antisocial activities: the relative roles of aggression and dysregulation. , 1999, Journal of child and family nursing.

[32]  Predicting developmental outcomes at school entry using a multiple-risk model: four American communities. The Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[33]  D. Cicchetti,et al.  Parental Maltreatment and Emotion Dysregulation as Risk Factors for Bullying and Victimization in Middle Childhood , 2001, Journal of clinical child psychology.

[34]  K. Kumpulainen,et al.  Peer Harassment in School: The Plight of the Vulnerable and Victimized , 2002 .

[35]  D. Pepler,et al.  Naturalistic Observations of Peer Interventions in Bullying , 2001 .

[36]  K Rigby,et al.  Australian school children's self appraisal of interpersonal relations: The bullying experience , 1993, Child psychiatry and human development.

[37]  Peter K. Smith,et al.  Bullying in schools: Lessons from two decades of research , 2000 .

[38]  M. Boulton,et al.  Bully/victim problems in middle-school children: Stability, self-perceived competence, peer perceptions and peer acceptance , 1994 .

[39]  A. Pellegrini,et al.  School bullies, victims, and aggressive victims: Factors relating to group affiliation and victimization in early adolescence. , 1999 .

[40]  T. Farmer Misconceptions of Peer Rejection and Problem Behavior , 2000 .

[41]  T. Farmer,et al.  Heterogeneity in the relationship between popularity and aggression: individual, group, and classroom influences. , 2003, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[42]  N. Crick,et al.  Relational and physical forms of peer victimization in preschool. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[43]  David Galloway,et al.  Classroom influences on bullying , 2002 .

[44]  D. Merten The Meaning of Meanness: Popularity, Competition, and Conflict among Junior High School Girls. , 1997 .

[45]  L. Hanish,et al.  Predictors of Peer Victimization among Urban Youth , 2000, Social Development.

[46]  W. Bukowski,et al.  Recent advances in the measurement of acceptance and rejection in the peer system. , 2000 .

[47]  M. O'moore Critical issues for teacher training to counter bullying and victimisation in Ireland , 2000 .

[48]  S. Hymel,et al.  Toward a process view of peer rejection and harassment. , 2001 .

[49]  C. Brown,et al.  The effect of the level of aggression in the first grade classroom on the course and malleability of aggressive behavior into middle school , 1998, Development and Psychopathology.

[50]  Renae D. Duncan Maltreatment by Parents and Peers: The Relationship between Child Abuse, Bully Victimization, and Psychological Distress , 1999 .

[51]  K. Rigby Effects of peer victimization in schools and perceived social support on adolescent well-being. , 2000, Journal of adolescence.

[52]  S. Graham,et al.  Peer harassment, psychological adjustment, and school functioning in early adolescence. , 2000 .

[53]  Patricia H. Hawley,et al.  The Ontogenesis of Social Dominance: A Strategy-Based Evolutionary Perspective , 1999 .

[54]  W. Hartup,et al.  Heterogeneity among Peer-Rejected Boys: Subtypes and Stabilities. , 1992 .

[55]  JoLynn V. Carney,et al.  Bullied to Death , 2000 .

[56]  D. Schwartz,et al.  The aggressive victim of bullying: Emotional and behavioral dysregulation as a pathway to victimization by peers. , 2001 .

[57]  A F Newcomb,et al.  Variations in patterns of attraction to same- and other-sex peers during early adolescence. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[58]  S. Luthar,et al.  Peer reputation among inner-city adolescents: Structure and correlates , 1996 .

[59]  K. Pierce,et al.  Aggressors and Their Victims: Toward a Contextual Framework for Understanding Children′s Aggressor-Victim Relationships , 1995 .

[60]  E. V. Hodges,et al.  Individual risk and social risk as interacting determinants of victimization in the peer group. , 1997, Developmental psychology.

[61]  Ramani S. Pilla,et al.  Bullying Behaviors Among US Youth: Prevalence and Association With Psychosocial Adjustment , 2001 .

[62]  Susan K. Egan,et al.  Does low self-regard invite victimization? , 1998, Developmental psychology.

[63]  M. Prinstein,et al.  Forms and Functions of Adolescent Peer Aggression Associated With High Levels of Peer Status , 2003 .

[64]  M. Boulton,et al.  Concurrent and longitudinal relations between children's playground behavior and social preference, victimization, and bullying. , 1999, Child development.

[65]  C. Rissel,et al.  Bullying behaviour and psychosocial health among school students in New South Wales, Australia: cross sectional survey , 1999, BMJ.

[66]  K. Dodge,et al.  The emergence of chronic peer victimization in boys' play groups. , 1993, Child development.

[67]  D. Haynie Delinquent Peers Revisited: Does Network Structure Matter?1 , 2001, American Journal of Sociology.

[68]  M. Boivin,et al.  Peer experiences and social self-perceptions: a sequential model. , 1997, Developmental psychology.

[69]  G. S. Pettit,et al.  Friendship as a moderating factor in the pathway between early harsh home environment and later victimization in the peer group. The Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[70]  G. Ladd,et al.  Peer victimization: cause or consequence of school maladjustment? , 1996, Child development.

[71]  D. Pepler,et al.  Peer involvement in bullying: insights and challenges for intervention. , 1999, Journal of adolescence.

[72]  M. Cadinu,et al.  Group identification in early adolescence: its relation with peer adjustment and its moderator effect on peer influence. , 2002, Child development.

[73]  C. Salmivalli,et al.  Peer networks and bullying in schools , 1997 .

[74]  N. E. Gronlund Sociometry in the Classroom , 1970 .

[75]  Kathryn M. LaFontana,et al.  The Nature of Children's Stereotypes of Popularity , 2001 .

[76]  K. Lewin Psychology and the Process of Group Living , 1943 .

[77]  Linda Grant,et al.  :Peer Power: Preadolescent Culture and Identity , 2000 .

[78]  A. Ferguson,et al.  Bad Boys: Public Schools in the Making of Black Masculinity , 2000 .

[79]  W. Hartup,et al.  Mutual antipathies and their significance in middle childhood and adolescence. , 2002, Child development.

[80]  J. Lipson Hostile Hallways: Bullying, Teasing, and Sexual Harassment in School , 2001 .

[81]  G. Ladd,et al.  Victimized children's responses to peers' aggression: Behaviors associated with reduced versus continued victimization , 1997, Development and Psychopathology.

[82]  Noel A. Card,et al.  Enemies and the darker side of peer relations , 2003 .

[83]  International Society for Research on Aggression , 1986, Neuropsychologia.

[84]  P. Rodkin,et al.  Peer Ecologies of Aggression and Bullying , 2004 .

[85]  K. Dodge,et al.  Dimensions and types of social status: A cross-age perspective. , 1982 .

[86]  M. McPherson,et al.  Birds of a Feather: Homophily in Social Networks , 2001 .

[87]  P. Slee Situational and interpersonal correlates of anxiety associated with peer victimisation , 1994, Child psychiatry and human development.

[88]  Sandra Graham,et al.  An Attributional Approach to Peer Victimization , 2001 .

[89]  T. Dishion,et al.  A longitudinal analysis of friendships and substance use: bidirectional influence from adolescence to adulthood. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[90]  G. Gredler Bullying in American schools: A social‐ecological perspective on prevention and intervention , 2005 .

[91]  E. V. Hodges,et al.  Preoccupied and Avoidant Coping during Middle Childhood , 1996 .

[92]  Daniel A. McFarland Student Resistance: How the Formal and Informal Organization of Classrooms Facilitate Everyday Forms of Student Defiance1 , 2001, American Journal of Sociology.

[93]  K. Rigby,et al.  Effects of parenting on the peer relations of Australian adolescents. , 1999, The Journal of social psychology.

[94]  J. Garbarino The ecology of human development: Experiments by nature and design: by Urie Bronfenbrenner Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1979, 330 + p. , 1980 .

[95]  Andrea Hopmeyer,et al.  Sociometric Popularity and Peer-Perceived Popularity , 1998 .

[96]  S. Fordham,et al.  Black students' school success: Coping with the “burden of ‘acting white’” , 1986 .

[97]  W. Hartup,et al.  Similarities between Friends and Nonfriends in Middle Childhood , 1998 .

[98]  K. Bierman,et al.  Predicting the longitudinal course associated with aggressive-rejected, aggressive (nonrejected), and rejected (nonaggressive) status , 1995, Development and Psychopathology.

[99]  Kathryn M. LaFontana,et al.  Children's perceptions of popular and unpopular peers: a multimethod assessment. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[100]  M. Boulton,et al.  Concurrent and longitudinal links between friendship and peer victimization: implications for befriending interventions. , 1999, Journal of adolescence.

[101]  R. Cairns,et al.  The popularity of friendship and the neglect of social networks: toward a new balance. , 1998, New directions for child development.

[102]  T. Vaillancourt,et al.  The Consequences of Childhood Peer Rejection , 2001 .

[103]  Ernest V. E. Hodges,et al.  Das Erlernen von Aggression in Familie und Peergroup , 2002 .

[104]  Susan K. Egan,et al.  Determinants of chronic victimization by peers: A review and new model of family influence. , 2001 .

[105]  T. Farmer,et al.  Enemies in the gendered societies of middle childhood: prevalence, stability, associations with social status, and aggression. , 2003, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[106]  D. Espelage,et al.  Examination of peer-group contextual effects on aggression during early adolescence. , 2003, Child development.

[107]  T. Farmer,et al.  Deviant or Diverse Peer Groups? The Peer Affiliations of Aggressive Elementary Students. , 2002 .

[108]  M. Boulton,et al.  Subtypes of peer harassment and their correlates: A social dominance perspective. , 2001 .

[109]  A. Pellegrini A longitudinal study of boys' rough-and-tumble play and dominance during early adolescence , 1995 .

[110]  E. Vernberg Psychological adjustment and experiences with peers during early adolescence: Reciprocal, incidental, or unidirectional relationships? , 1990, Journal of abnormal child psychology.

[111]  A. Gorman,et al.  The Attributes Adolescents Associate with Peer Popularity and Teacher Preference , 2002 .

[112]  W. Bukowski,et al.  The power of friendship: protection against an escalating cycle of peer victimization. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[113]  W. Bukowski,et al.  Groups, individuals, and victimization: A view of the peer system. , 2001 .

[114]  Michel Boivin,et al.  The roles of social withdrawal, peer rejection, and victimization by peers in predicting loneliness and depressed mood in childhood , 1995, Development and Psychopathology.

[115]  Michael F. Troy,et al.  Victimization among preschoolers: role of attachment relationship history. , 1987, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.