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10.1080/02673843.2014.975258

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1080/02673843.2014.975258
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C4391287!4391287!25931644
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suck abstract from ncbi


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pmid25931644      Int+J+Adolesc+Youth 2015 ; 20 (2): 131-47
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  • Teen responses when a younger school-age sibling has been bullied #MMPMID25931644
  • Honig AS; Zdunowski-Sjoblom N
  • Int J Adolesc Youth 2015[Apr]; 20 (2): 131-47 PMID25931644show ga
  • The prevalence of bullying among children, and the sometimes tragic consequences as a result, has become a major concern in schools. The larger research for this study reported on in-depth interviews with 28 elementary and middle school-age boys and girls (7?12 years) who had experienced various forms of bullying and relational aggression by their peers, mostly on school grounds, and the responses of their parents and teachers. Responses of the children's teen siblings to the younger child's revelations of being bullied are the focus of this report. In-depth interviews with each teen sibling (n = 28) and with each bullied child revealed how the children viewed the teen siblings' supportive strategies. Almost all the children (89%) reported that their older siblings talked with them and offered advice. The teen siblings shared with the younger ones that they too (71%) had been bullied, or they knew someone who had been bullied (18%). Teens gave the advice to ?bully back? to 11% and advice to ?tell someone? to 32% of the younger children. The children felt quite positive about their older siblings' advice (89%), which did differ depending on the bullied child's gender. Teen siblings gave advice to ?avoid bullies? to 77% of female and to 27% of male younger children.
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