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Title: r


1
r P School Moral Climate A New Method
to Assess Socio-Cultural Perceptions and Its
Relation to Bullying Anne Howard
Steven Landau Department of
Psychology Illinois State University
ABSTRACT Purpose Given widespread concern
associated with school-based bullying,
researchers are looking beyond the dyadic
perspective (i.e., focusing on bullies and
victims only) and are now considering a broader
social ecology. School moral climate has emerged
as an important factor in the occurrence of
bullying and how bystanders perceive bullies and
their victims. Method The current study presents
a new method for measuring school climate and
examined the relationships between climate
perceptions, affective and cognitive individual
differences, and bullying outcomes. Results Boys
who hold school climate perceptions more negative
than their classmates endorse less prosocial
attributes, stronger attitudes about the
acceptability of aggressive retaliation, and hold
less favorable views of a victim of bullying.
Conclusion School climate may have implications
for bullying and other student outcomes, and
should be considered as a focus of prevention
efforts.
  • METHOD
  • Participants
  • Participants included 377 6th 8th grade
    students from two middle schools. Fifty-three
    percent were male (Mean age 12.4). Although the
    focus of the study was on males, female
    participants were recruited to obtain a more
    complete understanding of cohort-wide school
    moral climate. Social climate data represented 17
    cohorts, and each cohort was comprised of three
    or four classrooms within a grade.
  • Procedure
  • Each participant completed the 55-item School
    Moral Atmosphere Questionnaire (SMAQ Høst et
    al., 1998) that is intended to measure students
    perception of school moral climate. This scale
    has demonstrated utility in predicting
    involvement with bullying and related behaviors
    (Brugman et al., 2003).
  • The SMAQ is a multiple-choice instrument that
    captures students perceptions about several
    components of the school climate including
  • School Connectedness (e.g., As a student you
    have a sort of contract with the school, so I
    think you shouldnt skip school.)
  • School Pride (e.g., I am proud of being a
    student at this school when a school team
    wins an important game.)
  • Relationships with Peers (e.g., At this school
    you can trust other students.)
  • Shared Sense of Community (e.g., Most students
    feel this school is a community, where
    students and teachers care about each other.)
  • Rules and Discipline (e.g., You have to be
    careful what you do, otherwise the teachers are
    on your back.)
  • Relationships with Teachers (e.g., Students
    trust their teachers.)
  • Similarly, boys whose school climate perceptions
    were discrepant from their classmates in a
    negative way endorsed greater tolerance for
    aggression compared to students who held positive
    biases about the school, t(168) 3.86, p lt .01.
    In other words, boys who described their schools
    in more unpleasant terms than peers also
    considered aggression a more acceptable solution
    for social problems.
  • Finally, after viewing an apparent bullying
    episode on-line, likeability of the putative
    victim was determined by boys school climate
    discrepancy from their cohort. When asked a
    series of social preference questions (e.g., How
    much do you like the victim? How popular do you
    think he is?), results indicated that boys who
    hold a negative view of school climate relative
    to classmates considered the victim significantly
    less favorably than boys who held a positive view
    of their school, t(142) -3.17, p lt .01.

Table 1 Descriptive statistics of boys school
climate discrepancy views and individual
differences psychosocial variables.
  • INTRODUCTION
  • School-based bullying is a pervasive problem
    with severe and lasting consequences. A number of
    negative consequences accrue among the targets of
    bullying, including psychological distress, low
    self-esteem, increased social anxiety, poor peer
    relations, and increased psychopathology.
  • Recent research (e.g., Gini, 2005) has shifted
    from a focus on the traditional dyadic
    perspective (i.e., a focus on the bully and
    victim) to a focus on bullying as a group
    process.
  • There are numerous variables to consider when
    attempting to understand group processes involved
    with bullying. One important variable, school
    moral climate, has recently emerged as a strong
    predictor of school-based behavior problems. The
    intent of this investigation was to examine
    school moral climate in the context of bullying.
  • School climate is a broad construct that
    generally refers to the physical conditions,
    interpersonal/social variables, and cultural
    norms of the school.
  • A few notable studies have examined the
    relationship between school climate and a range
    of student academic, behavioral, and emotional
    outcomes. Brugman et al. (2003) investigated the
    contributions of moral atmosphere to several
    school-based transgressive behaviors, including
    bullying. Results indicated that a students
    decision to violate rules or help a fellow
    classmate was more likely determined by social
    norms than the childs moral knowledge and social
    skills.
  • However, these studies considered school moral
    climate as an individual difference, and this
    view may misrepresent its validity as a
    socio-cultural construct.
  • The current study presents a new method of
    conceptualizing and deriving moral climate in
    schools. Specifically, school moral climate was
    conceptualized in the context of the childs
    potential illusory bias. School climate scores
    were obtained by aggregating individual scores
    cohort-wide (i.e., clusters of three or four
    classrooms) and subtracting the average from each
    individual score, yielding a discrepancy score.
  • Results are presented on the relation between
    cohort-wide perceptions of school moral climate,
    bullying rates, prosocial attributes, tolerance
    for aggression, and the how participants
    responded to a live bullying event.
  • CONCLUSIONS
  • School climate seems to be viewed differently by
    children who have been victimized by bullies. It
    is alarming that students who experience bullying
    feel less connected to their school and adopt
    beliefs about the acceptability of aggressive
    retaliation. Students beliefs about the relative
    positive or negative nature of their school
    climate also seem to inform how these students
    feel about the likeability of real victims. A
    negative view of victims may contribute to
    subsequent victimization.
  • Researchers and educators alike should be
    interested in demonstrating the benefits of a
    positive school climate and identifying the
    formula that successfully balances academic
    learning, social-emotional needs of children, and
    the social ecology of the school.
  • This poster can be accessed under Student
    Research at http//www.psychology.ilstu.edu/sela
    ndau/
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