Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old

This study investigated the overall happiness, school-related happiness, and depression of traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old Finnish students. Among the more than 700 participants, traditional bullying (26%) was more frequent than cyberbullying (18%). Receiving insulting text messag...

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Main Authors: Lotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara, Juhani E. Lehto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-01-01
Series:Open Review of Educational Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2016.1155168
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spelling doaj-3493accc6d944395b9acc43f60cfd5782020-11-24T22:02:34ZengTaylor & Francis GroupOpen Review of Educational Research2326-55072016-01-0131355110.1080/23265507.2016.11551681155168Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-oldLotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara0Juhani E. Lehto1University of HelsinkiUniversity of HelsinkiThis study investigated the overall happiness, school-related happiness, and depression of traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old Finnish students. Among the more than 700 participants, traditional bullying (26%) was more frequent than cyberbullying (18%). Receiving insulting text messages or being the subject of offensive comments on the Internet were the most common forms of cyberbullying. Often those who were cyberbullied were also victims of traditional bullying (the poly-victimized comprised 11% of all participants). We found no differences between genders in traditional bullying rates, but cyberbullying was more common among girls. Being victimized, in either form, was related to a decrease in all measures of psychological well-being, with the poly-victimized scoring the lowest. In particular, being victimized predicted depression, with the poly-victimized scoring the highest. The results indicate a clear need to intervene in early adolescents’ culture of communicating via electronic devices and especially to identify victims of bullying in both the real and cyberworld.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2016.1155168Bullyingcyberbullyinghappinessschool-related happinessdepression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara
Juhani E. Lehto
spellingShingle Lotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara
Juhani E. Lehto
Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
Open Review of Educational Research
Bullying
cyberbullying
happiness
school-related happiness
depression
author_facet Lotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara
Juhani E. Lehto
author_sort Lotta Uusitalo-Malmivaara
title Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
title_short Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
title_full Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
title_fullStr Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
title_full_unstemmed Happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
title_sort happiness and depression in the traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Open Review of Educational Research
issn 2326-5507
publishDate 2016-01-01
description This study investigated the overall happiness, school-related happiness, and depression of traditionally bullied and cyberbullied 12-year-old Finnish students. Among the more than 700 participants, traditional bullying (26%) was more frequent than cyberbullying (18%). Receiving insulting text messages or being the subject of offensive comments on the Internet were the most common forms of cyberbullying. Often those who were cyberbullied were also victims of traditional bullying (the poly-victimized comprised 11% of all participants). We found no differences between genders in traditional bullying rates, but cyberbullying was more common among girls. Being victimized, in either form, was related to a decrease in all measures of psychological well-being, with the poly-victimized scoring the lowest. In particular, being victimized predicted depression, with the poly-victimized scoring the highest. The results indicate a clear need to intervene in early adolescents’ culture of communicating via electronic devices and especially to identify victims of bullying in both the real and cyberworld.
topic Bullying
cyberbullying
happiness
school-related happiness
depression
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23265507.2016.1155168
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