Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support

Children and adolescents who are targets of peer victimization experience many negative developmental outcomes, including depression and anxiety, which can have lasting effects throughout their lives.  Researchers have sought to identify protective factors that lessen the negative impact of peer vic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mahboubi, Maryam
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64229
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-64229
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-642292018-01-05T17:30:15Z Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support Mahboubi, Maryam Children and adolescents who are targets of peer victimization experience many negative developmental outcomes, including depression and anxiety, which can have lasting effects throughout their lives.  Researchers have sought to identify protective factors that lessen the negative impact of peer victimization on wellbeing.  Social support has been identified as one of the most significant protective factors.  Studies that examine the effect of social support from multiple sources on the wellbeing of students who are victimized by their peers have reported mixed results.  The present research addressed these inconsistent findings by extending the aspects of social support that are measured to include both source and type.  This study sought to answer three questions: (1) Does overall social support (regardless of type) from a) parents, b) teachers, c) classmates and d) close friends moderate the relation between overall victimization and depression and/or anxiety? (2) Does the type of social support provided (emotional, informational, appraisal and/or instrumental support) moderate the relation between victimization and depression and/or anxiety? (3) Does overall social support (regardless of type) from a) parents, b) teachers, c) classmates and/or d) close friends moderate the relation between different forms of victimization (verbal, social, physical and cyber) and depression and/or anxiety? Participants were 720 students in grades 4-7 who completed self-report measures of victimization experiences at school, perceived social support, and a screening index for depression and anxiety. Multiple regression analyses with predictors entered in blocks were run to explore the moderating role of social support in the relation between victimization and depression and/or anxiety. Results indicate that certain sources and types of social support moderate the relation between victimization and depression/anxiety, while other sources and types of social support are associated with higher depression/anxiety among 4th-7th graders.  This held true when considering both overall victimization and various forms of victimization.  Results suggest that the moderating role of social support in the relation between victimization-depression and victimization-anxiety are distinct; when exploring the impact of social support from peers at school, classmates and close friends should be treated as distinct groups; social support from parents can have a positive impact on 4th-7th graders. Education, Faculty of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of Graduate 2018-01-03T18:16:46Z 2018-01-03T18:16:46Z 2017 2018-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64229 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Children and adolescents who are targets of peer victimization experience many negative developmental outcomes, including depression and anxiety, which can have lasting effects throughout their lives.  Researchers have sought to identify protective factors that lessen the negative impact of peer victimization on wellbeing.  Social support has been identified as one of the most significant protective factors.  Studies that examine the effect of social support from multiple sources on the wellbeing of students who are victimized by their peers have reported mixed results.  The present research addressed these inconsistent findings by extending the aspects of social support that are measured to include both source and type.  This study sought to answer three questions: (1) Does overall social support (regardless of type) from a) parents, b) teachers, c) classmates and d) close friends moderate the relation between overall victimization and depression and/or anxiety? (2) Does the type of social support provided (emotional, informational, appraisal and/or instrumental support) moderate the relation between victimization and depression and/or anxiety? (3) Does overall social support (regardless of type) from a) parents, b) teachers, c) classmates and/or d) close friends moderate the relation between different forms of victimization (verbal, social, physical and cyber) and depression and/or anxiety? Participants were 720 students in grades 4-7 who completed self-report measures of victimization experiences at school, perceived social support, and a screening index for depression and anxiety. Multiple regression analyses with predictors entered in blocks were run to explore the moderating role of social support in the relation between victimization and depression and/or anxiety. Results indicate that certain sources and types of social support moderate the relation between victimization and depression/anxiety, while other sources and types of social support are associated with higher depression/anxiety among 4th-7th graders.  This held true when considering both overall victimization and various forms of victimization.  Results suggest that the moderating role of social support in the relation between victimization-depression and victimization-anxiety are distinct; when exploring the impact of social support from peers at school, classmates and close friends should be treated as distinct groups; social support from parents can have a positive impact on 4th-7th graders. === Education, Faculty of === Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of === Graduate
author Mahboubi, Maryam
spellingShingle Mahboubi, Maryam
Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
author_facet Mahboubi, Maryam
author_sort Mahboubi, Maryam
title Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
title_short Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
title_full Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
title_fullStr Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
title_full_unstemmed Victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
title_sort victimization and internalizing difficulties : the moderating role of social support
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/64229
work_keys_str_mv AT mahboubimaryam victimizationandinternalizingdifficultiesthemoderatingroleofsocialsupport
_version_ 1718586071836524544