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Cyberaggression among primary school pupils in England and Spain. Claire P. Monks, Rosario Ortega, Susanne Robinson, Mónica Alfaro, Penny Worlidge. With funding from: University of Greenwich (England) and Proyectos de Excelencia (05-07-05 HUM2175) (Spain).
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Cyberaggression among primary school pupils in England and Spain Claire P. Monks, Rosario Ortega, Susanne Robinson, Mónica Alfaro, Penny Worlidge With funding from: University of Greenwich (England) and Proyectos de Excelencia (05-07-05 HUM2175) (Spain)
Definition and means of Cyberbullying • Cyberbullying: • Aggression carried out using electronic forms of contact • Intentional • Repeated • Power imbalance (Smith, et al., 2008; Ortega, Calmaestra y Mora-Merchán, 2008). • Rivers et al. (2011) cyberbullying can take a variety of forms; • via phone calls, text or video/picture messages, • via e-mail, • in chatrooms, • via instant messenger, • ‘slambooks’ • on social network sites, • ‘griefing’ in online games, • within virtual environments (e.g. Second Life) • in blogs.
Levels of involvement in cyberbullying • UK: • Smith et al. (2008) 6.6% of adolescents (11-16y) surveyed reported being cyberbullied ‘often’ and 15.6% ‘once or twice’. • Spain: • Ortega, et. al., (2008) approximately a quarter of 12-16 year olds were victims of cyberbullying, 4% reported severe cybervictimisation.
Gender differences • Inconsistent findings regarding gender differences in roles in cyberbullying (Rivers et al., 2011) • No significant gender differences (Smith et al., 2008) • Li (2006) 11-14 year olds • Cyberbullies: 22% of boys and 12% of girls. • Cybervictims: 25% of boys and 26% of girls. • Types?
Links with traditional bullying • Juvonen & Gross (2008) most cybervictims knew their aggressor(s) from school • Raskauskas & Stoltz (2007) and Smith et al. (2008) found links between cyberbullying and traditional bullying among adolescents: • Many cybervictims were also victims of traditional bullying • Many cyberbullies also bullied using traditional methods • Guarini, Brighi & Genta (2009)
Use of ICT by children under 12 years • High levels of internet access and mobile ownership in general in both countries (e.g. INE, 2009; Bryon Review, 2008; MobileLife Report, 2006) • UK • Children under 11 years are using the internet and mobile phones (Byron Review, 2008 & MobileLife Report, 2006). Average age first going online 8 years (EU KidsOnline, 2010) • Spain • Average age first going online 9 years (EU KidsOnline, 2010). 75.5% of homes in Spain have a mobile phone (INE, 2009)
Extent of involvement in cyberbullying • Little research has examined the nature and extent of cyberbullying among younger age groups. • UK: • Anti-Bullying Alliance (ABA, 2009) found that about 20% of 10-11 year olds reported being cyberbullied. • Similar levels were found among 7-11 year olds; 5% aggressors and 23% victims (Monks et al., 2009).
Aims of current study • To examine: • the prevalence of internet and mobile phone use among 7-11 year olds • the methods of aggression via the internet/mobile phone which are most commonly reported among this age-range • how age, gender, country and involvement in ‘traditional’ aggression may be related to involvement in cyberaggression.
Method • Participants • England: 220 participants (52.7% boys, 47.3% girls) aged between 7 and 11 years of age (mean=9.67y, SD=1.34) were recruited from five primary schools in the South East of England • Spain: 1192 participants (51.7% boys and 48.3% girls) aged between 10 and 11 years of age (mean=10.50y, SD=0.50) were recruited from 15 primary schools in Andalucía, Southern Spain
Assessments • Anonymous self-report questionnaire (Ortega et al., 2007) was used to ask participants about: • their use of ICT. • their experiences of aggression and cyberaggression. • Procedure • The questionnaires were administered to participants in a large group setting.
Access to ICT by country *p<0.05; **p<0.01
Involvement in cyberaggression 45.5% (N=100) 35.0% (N=77) 16.1% (N=173) 9.50% (N=99) 19.3% (N=273) 12.5% (N=176)
Types of cyberaggression experienced SMS 30.50% (N=67) 3.10% (N=34) 7.20% (N=101) 191.82** Email 6.40% (N=14) 3.70% (N=39) 3.80% (N=53) 3.33 Messenger 7.30% (N=16) 6.70% (N=71) 6.20% (N=87) 0.10 *p<0.05; **p<0.01
Factors predicting involvement in cyberaggression • 4 Logistic Regressions performed to examine involvement in cyberaggression • A) Victim via mobile phone • B) Victim via the internet • C) Aggressor via mobile phone • D) Aggressor via the internet • Predictors: age, gender, country, involvement in traditional aggression
A) Victim via mobile phone • Model: א2 (4df) = 130.61, p<0.01 • Country was a significant predictor • Gender was a significant predictor • Being a traditional victim was a significant predictor *p<0.05; **p<0.01
B) Victim via the internet • Model: א2 (4df) = 36.65, p<0.01 • Age was a significant predictor • Being a traditional victim was a significant predictor *p<0.05; **p<0.01
C) Aggressor via mobile phone • Model: א2 (4df) = 169.66, p<0.01 • Country was a significant predictor • Gender was a significant predictor • Being a traditional aggressor was a significant predictor *p<0.05; **p<0.01
D) Aggressor via the internet • Model: א2 (4df) = 40.34, p<0.01 • Gender was a significant predictor • Being a traditional aggressor was a significant predictor *p<0.05; **p<0.01
Discussion • Children of upper primary school age (7-11 years) are using the internet and many have mobile phones • Some report involvement in cyberaggression via the internet and mobile phone. • The most common types of aggression reported by victims were similar: • England: SMS, Messenger, Email • Spain: Messenger, Email, SMS • Less common was aggression in Chatrooms, Calls, MMS and Websites
Country differences: • The level of involvement and types of cyberaggression appear to differ between countries • More pupils in England reported being victimised by mobile phone (SMS or MMS) • A significantly higher proportion of pupils in England reported being an aggressor or victim of aggression via mobile phone. • UNICEF (2006) and Monks et al. (2011)
Gender differences: • Boys are more likely than girls to be aggressors (Li, 2006) and more likely to be victims of aggression via mobile phone • Age differences: • Older children were more likely to be victims of aggression via the internet, perhaps due to their more extensive use of the medium.
Involvement in traditional aggression: • There was a significant link between being a ‘traditional’ and ‘cyber’ aggressor and being a ‘traditional’ and ‘cyber’ victim. • These findings support those of Raskauskas and Stoltz (2007) and Smith et al. (2008) and Guarini et al. (2009)
Limitations and Future Directions for Research • Examine gender differences in the specific types of cyberaggression used/experienced • Explore these issues across a broader age-range • Examine the issue of repetition of the behaviour
Implications • Other studies have found children this age find cyberaggression as hurtful/upsetting as traditional forms of aggression (e.g. Monks et al., 2009). • Work should begin early on teaching children how to stay safe on the internet. • Aggression via mobile phones should be addressed with primary school-aged pupils.
Thank You ! c.p.monks@greenwich.ac.uk