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Journal Article

Citation

Li Q, Chu X, Yang Y, Jia Y. Child Care Health Dev. 2024; 50(4): e13302.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/cch.13302

PMID

38953565

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the digital age, bullying manifests in two distinct forms: traditional bullying and cyberbullying. Children's peer relationships are important predictors of bullying, and bullying in turn predicts peer relationships. However, few researchers have noted the bidirectional relationship between peer relationships and bullying.

METHODS: The present study used a two-wave cross-lagged longitudinal design to fill this gap. The potential sex differences were also examined in this relationship. The sample consisted of 527 Chinese children aged 8 to 12 years (M = 9.69, SD = .96; 53.5% female). Participants completed peer nominations for peer acceptance, peer rejection and social dominance, as well as self-reports of traditional bullying and cyberbullying.

RESULTS: Results showed that peer rejection at the first time point (T1) significantly and positively predicted traditional bullying perpetration, cyberbullying perpetration and cyberbullying victimization at the second time point (T2). Traditional bullying victimization at T1 significantly and negatively predicted peer acceptance and social dominance at T2. The results also revealed significant male and female differences. For instance, among boys, peer acceptance at T1 significantly and negatively predicted cyberbullying victimization at T2. In contrast, this relationship was not observed among girls. The present findings have important implications for understanding the cyclical relationship between peer relationships and bullying and providing practical guidance for improving peer relationships and reducing bullying.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Child; Female; Male; Sex Factors; Longitudinal Studies; China; bullying; peer acceptance; East Asian People; Child Behavior/psychology; *Crime Victims/psychology; *Bullying/psychology; *Interpersonal Relations; *Peer Group; cross‐lagged analyses; Cyberbullying/psychology; peer rejection; social dominance; Social Dominance

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