Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations
The current study investigated (1) the types of solutions that students and parents generate in response to hypothetical bullying situations, (2) the effectiveness of the strategies, and (3) the effectiveness of strategies when considering parent–child communication. Two hundred twenty-five junior h...
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2014.884006 |
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doaj-d2621456bb944861955ffa7a016e32462020-11-25T01:42:37ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Adolescence and Youth0267-38432164-45272017-07-0122325126710.1080/02673843.2014.884006884006Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situationsLaura D. Offrey0Christina M. Rinaldi1University of AlbertaUniversity of AlbertaThe current study investigated (1) the types of solutions that students and parents generate in response to hypothetical bullying situations, (2) the effectiveness of the strategies, and (3) the effectiveness of strategies when considering parent–child communication. Two hundred twenty-five junior high school students and their parents were required to read four short scripts involving hypothetical bullying dilemmas and generate as many solutions as possible to solve each situation. Participants also filled out a parent–child communication questionnaire. Results revealed that the most common type of solutions provided by both students and parents were help-seeking strategies. Although students provided significantly more assertive solutions than parents, 41% generated at least one strategy that may worsen the situation. The overall effectiveness rating of solutions for students and parents fell slightly below effective. Finally, parent–child communication was associated with the effectiveness of solutions generated. Educational recommendations and future research steps will be discussed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2014.884006bullyingadolescentsparent–child communicationstrategies |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Laura D. Offrey Christina M. Rinaldi |
spellingShingle |
Laura D. Offrey Christina M. Rinaldi Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations International Journal of Adolescence and Youth bullying adolescents parent–child communication strategies |
author_facet |
Laura D. Offrey Christina M. Rinaldi |
author_sort |
Laura D. Offrey |
title |
Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
title_short |
Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
title_full |
Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
title_fullStr |
Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
title_full_unstemmed |
Parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
title_sort |
parent–child communication and adolescents' problem-solving strategies in hypothetical bullying situations |
publisher |
Taylor & Francis Group |
series |
International Journal of Adolescence and Youth |
issn |
0267-3843 2164-4527 |
publishDate |
2017-07-01 |
description |
The current study investigated (1) the types of solutions that students and parents generate in response to hypothetical bullying situations, (2) the effectiveness of the strategies, and (3) the effectiveness of strategies when considering parent–child communication. Two hundred twenty-five junior high school students and their parents were required to read four short scripts involving hypothetical bullying dilemmas and generate as many solutions as possible to solve each situation. Participants also filled out a parent–child communication questionnaire. Results revealed that the most common type of solutions provided by both students and parents were help-seeking strategies. Although students provided significantly more assertive solutions than parents, 41% generated at least one strategy that may worsen the situation. The overall effectiveness rating of solutions for students and parents fell slightly below effective. Finally, parent–child communication was associated with the effectiveness of solutions generated. Educational recommendations and future research steps will be discussed. |
topic |
bullying adolescents parent–child communication strategies |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673843.2014.884006 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT lauradoffrey parentchildcommunicationandadolescentsproblemsolvingstrategiesinhypotheticalbullyingsituations AT christinamrinaldi parentchildcommunicationandadolescentsproblemsolvingstrategiesinhypotheticalbullyingsituations |
_version_ |
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