Fischer 2021
Fischer 2021
Fischer 2021
To cite this article: Saskia M. Fischer, Heather A. Woods & Ludwig Bilz (2021): Class
teachers’ bullying-related self-efficacy and their students’ bullying victimization, bullying perpetration,
and combined victimization and perpetration, Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, DOI:
10.1080/10926771.2021.1933290
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/10926771.2021.1933290
Article views: 55
Introduction
Bullying is defined as an aggressive and negative social behavior that is repeated,
intended to harm the victimized student, and marked by an imbalance of power
between the students involved (Olweus, 2010). Several meta-analyses have found
bullying victimization associated with increased risks of psychosomatic problems and
mental health problems, such as depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation, and
decreased academic achievement (Gini & Pozzoli, 2013; Heerde
& Hemphill, 2019; Moore et al., 2017). Those who bully may also experience health
problems. Even when the negative consequences are less severe and less
well studied, longitudinal studies indicate that students who bully others are
also at higher risk for suicidal ideations, antisocial personality disorder, and
func-tional impairment (Evans et al., 2018; Pontillo et al., 2019).
International prevalence rates vary up to 35%, with prevalence rates for
bullying perpetration (35%) and bullying victimization (36%) being very similar
(Modecki et al., 2014). Next to bullying perpetration behavior and bullying
victimization experiences (students who are bullied), students can be both bullied
and bully others (bully-victims). Bully-victims are the rarest group among
individuals who engage in bullying behavior. Though not explicitly analyzed in
many studies, under 10% prevalence rates can be expected (Lereya et al.,
2015). However, bully-victims are particularly affected by the negative
consequences of bullying and are especially hard to address by bullying inter-
ventions (Sung et al., 2020). In Germany, where the current study was con-
ducted, researchers have found roughly 13% of learners experience bullying,
with 8% being bullied, 4% bullying others, and about 1% being bully-victims
(Fischer, John, Melzer et al., 2020b). Studies usually find that male students bully
others more often than female students. However, gender differences for victi-
mization are less clear (Smith et al., 2019). Consistent with these international
findings, about 6% of boys and less than 2% of girls in Germany reported
bullying others, and 1.5% of boys and less than 1% of girls identified themselves
as bully-victims (Fischer, John, Melzer et al., 2020b). However, both 8% to 9% of
girls and boys reported being victimized in bullying situations. The type of school
students attend and their grade level can be risk factors for bullying. Bullying and
victimization rates are higher in schools for special education and grades six to
eight and are lowest in schools that prepare for university studies (Fischer, John,
Melzer et al., 2020b; Margraf & Pinquart, 2016).
The social-ecological model (Bronfenbrenner, 1994) can be applied to bully-
ing dynamics (Hong & Espelage, 2012; Zych et al., 2019). Bullying is a social
phenomenon that does not only exist between two individual students but arises
in a complex social system (Hong & Espelage, 2012). Teachers are an essential
part of this social system. Their attitudes toward bullying and their intervention
behavior can influence students’ behavior (Longobardi et al., 2020; Yoon &
Bauman, 2014). Following socialization models, teachers act as socializing
agents for students by communicating values and behaviors that are socially
accepted (Bierman, 2011; Farmer et al., 2011; Yoon & Barton, 2008). These
values, behaviors, and beliefs are modeled through daily interaction between
teachers and students. Students learn that bullying is not acceptable when the
teachers model non-aggressive and respectful behavior and react promptly and
self-confidently to bullying situations. However, about 15% of students report that
teachers did not intervene in bullying situations (Wachs et al., 2019).
JOURNAL OF AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA 3
Method
Sample
Both student and teacher data were collected in a stratified random school
sample (strata: school type) from 24 schools in a federal state in east
Germany. Three relevant German school types were included that represent
the educa-tional system of the federal state: grammar schools (Gymnasium,
n = 7), in which students are taught from classes five to twelve and prepared
for uni-versity study; high schools (Oberschule, n = 13), in which students are
taught from classes five to ten and mainly prepared for vocational school;
and schools for special education (Förderschule, n = 4), in which students
with special educational needs are taught. The participating schools were
chosen randomly from all schools in the federal state.
Based on power analysis, 1,596 students and 89 classes from 23 schools
were desired for the sample (assumptions: small correlational effect size of 0.1,
alpha = 0.05, power = 0.80, design factor for three-level data = 2.04 based on
small ICC of 0.01 at class and school level; ICC based on Bilz, 2008; calcula-
tions based on Faul et al., 2007; Teerenstra et al., 2008). To collect data that are
robust against possible school failures, it was decided to collect data from 24
schools. Forty-one schools were contacted in total (response rate at school level
60%) to reach a sample of 24 schools. Probability-proportional-to-size sampling
(PPS) was used so that every student had equal chances of selection
independently from the size of the school that the student attended.
The whole sample included 2,071 students (48.7% female) with a mean age of
x = 13.64 years (SD = 1.17). Male and female students did not differ in age (t
6 S. M. FISCHER ET AL.
Procedure
The study’s methodology and ethics were approved by the data protection
officer and the federal state’s education authority where the participating
schools were located. Principals of the randomly chosen schools were
informed via mail, and follow-up telephone calls were made afterward. Most
principals discussed the possible participation in the study with the teachers
and parent representatives. Upon receiving consent from the principal, infor-
mation materials were sent to the schools and distributed to students in
participating classes. Only students who wished to participate and whose
parents had signed consent forms could participate in the study. Informed
consent was obtained. Data were collected between June and October 2014.
Students and teachers answered the questionnaires in approximately 45 min-
utes. Student data were collected during regular school hours on an
appointed day by the research team. Students were told that they could
refrain from participating at any point in time without any negative
consequences. The class teachers were asked to answer the questionnaire
simultaneously as the students in their classes. If this was not possible, class
teachers answered the questionnaire in advance. A specially developed
coding system linked student and class teacher data while guaranteeing
students and teachers’ anonymity at any point in time. Schools received
financial compensation if they reached approximately 70% of teacher
participation to increase teachers’ motivation to participate in the study.
Measures
Teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy. Teacher’s bullying intervention
self-efficacy was assessed by a five-item scale (first published in German by
Fischer et al., 2017). The items assess different aspects of teachers’ bullying
JOURNAL OF AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA 7
Table 1. Items from the Teacher Bullying Intervention Self-Efficacy Scale (translated from
German by authors) Including Means, Standard Deviations, and Standardized Factor Loadings.
Standard Factor
Item Mean Deviation Loadings
1) I am sure that I have the ability to carefully observe my surroundings in order 3.02 0.51 .55
to identify bullying and violence in my class at an early stage.
2) I am confident in my ability to intervene in instances of bullying and violence 3.23 0.55 .73
between students.
3) I am confident that I can put an end to instances of bullying and violence 2.96 0.67 .87
between students.
4) When it comes to bullying and violence between students, I am able to find 3.00 0.66 .80
a solution.
5) When I witness an instance of bullying and violence between students, 3.07 0.53 .48
I know how to act.
Note: Given are the standardized factor loadings in the congeneric CFA (CFI = .98, SRMR = .03), n = 82. Possible
answers to all items: 1 = not at all correct, 2 = hardly correct, 3 = rather correct, 4 = totally correct.
8 S. M. FISCHER ET AL.
Data analyses
Multilevel analyses were conducted to account for the dependence of teacher
and student data. Data analyses were performed using SPSS 22 (IBM, 2013)
and MPlus 8.2 (Muthén & Muthén, 1998-2017). Logistic multilevel regression
analyses with two levels (students, classes) were conducted to assess the
association between class teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy and
students’ bullying experiences. Students’ victimization experiences, perpetra-
tion behavior, and combined victimization and perpetration were dichoto-
mized. Teachers’ intervention self-efficacy was standardized using z-scores
at the class level and assessed as a continuous variable.
Results
Teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy
The mean score of teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy was x = 3.07 (SD =
0.44; Min = 2.00, Max = 4.00). Kurtosis of the score was −0.25 and skew was 0.25,
so the distribution of the score met the assumption of normality. Results showed no
differences regarding self-efficacy between female and male teachers (t
(79) = 0.06, p = .950, d = 0.14), between teachers with many years of experience
and teachers with fewer years of work experience (t(77) = −0.47, p = .637, d =
2
−0.11) or according to school type (F(2, 79) = 0.84, p = .437, η = .022).
Table 2. Results of the Logistic Regression Analyses for Students’ (a) Bullying
Victimization Experiences, (b) Bullying Perpetration Behavior, and (c) Combined
Bullying Victimization and Perpetration.
B Standard error (SE) p OR (95% CI)
2 2
(a) Bullying victimization (Model: BIC = 1050.89, R Level 1 < .01, R Level 2 > .99)
Level 1
Students’ gender – female −0.11 0.16 .470 0.90 (0.66, 1.22)
Level 2
Class teachers’ self-efficacy (z-score) −0.02 0.08 .848 0.98 (0.84, 1.15)
Class teachers’ gender – female 0.23 0.21 .277 1.26 (0.84, 1.90)
Class teachers’ work experience – high 0.08 0.17 .645 1.08 (0.78, 1.49)
Grade – year eight −0.25 0.17 .134 0.78 (0.57, 1.08)
School type
High school 0.45 0.18 .011 1.57 (1.11, 2.20)
School for special education 1.00 0.29 .001 2.72 (1.54, 4.81)
(b) Bullying perpetration behavior (Model: BIC = 902.22, R Level 1 = .02, R
2 2
To explore whether the results are robust against a possible bias of the
schools’ unique characteristics for special education, the analyses reported
above were repeated without the data from students and teachers at schools for
special education (results are not reported here and can be obtained from the
first author). The results reported above were robust against this exclusion.
Discussion
In the present article, the associations between class teachers’ bullying
intervention self-efficacy and their students’ bullying victimization
JOURNAL OF AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA 11
Limitations
Some limitations of the study should be considered when interpreting
the results. The teacher sample is predominantly female and highly
experienced in teaching. Generalization of the results to other samples
with characteristics different than these should be made with caution.
Students’ bullying behaviors and bullying victimization experiences only have little
shared variance at the class level (level 2). Also, the effect of class
JOURNAL OF AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA 15
Practical implications
Our results suggest that teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy may be
associated with students’ bullying perpetration behavior. If further studies sup-
port this finding, professional development should focus on supporting teachers’
bullying-related self-efficacy as this may help decrease bullying in schools.
Several studies show that it is possible to improve teachers’ self-
efficacy in carefully designed training (Crooks et al., 2017; Newman-
Carlson & Horne, 2004). Teachers with higher self-efficacy beliefs report
intervening more often in bullying situations (Fischer et al., 2020a). The
experience of successfully intervening in bullying situations will, in turn,
further increase teachers’ bullying intervention self-efficacy.
Professional development could include role play and virtual learning
environments. Real-life bullying episodes can bolster the validity of such
training. Thus, teachers could be encouraged to discuss their own bullying
experiences together. In group discussions, possible intervention behaviors
can be developed and reflected upon, with teachers learning from each
other’s experiences (Bandura, 1977). This type of training should be held on
at least two different dates with an appropriate period in between so that
teachers can put their newly learned strategies from the first trainingday into
practice and then reflect on their successes during thesecond. By doing so,
teachers can develop their bullying intervention self-efficacy by reflecting on
their own and vicarious experiences.
16 S. M. FISCHER ET AL.
Conclusion
The present study suggests that higher self-efficacy of teachers may be
asso-ciated with reduced bullying behavior of students. This finding means
that teachers’ self-efficacy is not only relevant for teachers’ intervention
behavior but can also extend into students’ bullying experiences. Training
that is aimed to support teachers’ self-efficacy is therefore recommended.
However, the underlying mechanisms of the reported association remain
unclear. Moreover, teachers’ higher self-efficacy does not seem to be
reflected in students’ bullying victimization, nor do they seem to affect bully-
victims. Further analyses should investigate the presented associations and
their underlying processes in more detail.
Author Note
Saskia M. Fischer, Department of Pedagogical Psychology, Brandenburg University of
Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany, E-mail: saskia.fischer@b-tu.de, ORCID iD:
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2753-6297; Heather A. Woods, Faculty of Education, University of
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, E-mail: hwood082@uottawa.ca; Ludwig Bilz, Department of
Pedagogical Psychology, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg,
Germany, E-mail: ludwig.bilz@b-tu.de, ORCID iD: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3017-0492
This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (Grant No. BI 1046/6-1).
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (Grant No. BI 1046/6-1).
Funding
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; German
Research Foundation) [grant number BI 1046/6-1].
ORCID
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