Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities

This survey study was conducted to determine childhood abuse experiences among pre-service special education teachers at five Jordanian universities. The sample consisted of (384) students. A survey was constructed, validated and administrated on the students. Results revealed that 6.1% of all parti...

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Main Authors: Eman Al-Zboon, Jamal Ahmad, Kholoud Al-Dababneh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-10-01
Series:International Journal of Adolescence and Youth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2015.1093008
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spelling doaj-1ede7db64a0e410fa53590010421c13e2020-11-25T02:07:55ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Adolescence and Youth0267-38432164-45272016-10-0121447648510.1080/02673843.2015.10930081093008Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian UniversitiesEman Al-Zboon0Jamal Ahmad1Kholoud Al-Dababneh2Hashemite UniversityHashemite UniversityHashemite UniversityThis survey study was conducted to determine childhood abuse experiences among pre-service special education teachers at five Jordanian universities. The sample consisted of (384) students. A survey was constructed, validated and administrated on the students. Results revealed that 6.1% of all participants were exposed to a high level of abuse during childhood. Participants rated verbal abuse domain as the highest domain of CA, followed by neglect, emotional abuse and physical abuse. Meanwhile, students rated sexual abuse domain as the lowest domain. Results also revealed statistically significant mean differences in the level of abuse due to gender, maternal employment, marital status, cumulative average, monthly income, parent’s education level and residence location. The implications for planning programmes are described.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2015.1093008Child abusechild maltreatmentpre-service special education teacheruniversity students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eman Al-Zboon
Jamal Ahmad
Kholoud Al-Dababneh
spellingShingle Eman Al-Zboon
Jamal Ahmad
Kholoud Al-Dababneh
Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
International Journal of Adolescence and Youth
Child abuse
child maltreatment
pre-service special education teacher
university students
author_facet Eman Al-Zboon
Jamal Ahmad
Kholoud Al-Dababneh
author_sort Eman Al-Zboon
title Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
title_short Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
title_full Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
title_fullStr Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending Jordanian Universities
title_sort prevalence and types of childhood abuse among special education students attending jordanian universities
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Adolescence and Youth
issn 0267-3843
2164-4527
publishDate 2016-10-01
description This survey study was conducted to determine childhood abuse experiences among pre-service special education teachers at five Jordanian universities. The sample consisted of (384) students. A survey was constructed, validated and administrated on the students. Results revealed that 6.1% of all participants were exposed to a high level of abuse during childhood. Participants rated verbal abuse domain as the highest domain of CA, followed by neglect, emotional abuse and physical abuse. Meanwhile, students rated sexual abuse domain as the lowest domain. Results also revealed statistically significant mean differences in the level of abuse due to gender, maternal employment, marital status, cumulative average, monthly income, parent’s education level and residence location. The implications for planning programmes are described.
topic Child abuse
child maltreatment
pre-service special education teacher
university students
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2015.1093008
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