The bigger the family, the more likely there will be bullying within
sibling ranks, a UK study suggests.
Within larger families, the babies are most likely to be bullied
while the perpetrators are probably boys and probably the oldest
kids in the house, researchers found. But among kids who were
involved in bullying at all, the majority were both bully and victim
at different times.
Identifying the factors that influence a child's risk for being on
either side of the bullying dynamic could help in formulating ways
to avert this behavior, the authors write in Developmental
Psychology.
"Most importantly, sibling bullying was not related to whether this
was a two- or single-parent household, income or social class - it
occurs in poor and rich families alike," said study co-author Dieter
Wolke, a psychology researcher at the University of Warwick in
Coventry.
"Siblings fight about the resources that are available whether
attention or food in poorer households or the new smartphone in rich
families," Wolke said by email. "It is about the relative dominance
within the family!"
Roughly 85 percent of children grow up with at least one other child
in the family, Wolke's team notes. While these are some of the
longest-lasting close relationships for many people, they can also
be characterized by escalating conflicts that lead to lasting
physical and mental health problems.
For the current study, researchers analyzed data on 6,838 British
children born in 1991 and 1992, as well as their mothers.
When children were 5 years old, their mothers reported how often
kids were victims or perpetrators of bullying in the household.
Then, when kids reached age 12, they reported their own experiences
with bullying in the previous six months as well as the age when
they first were involved in this behavior as a victim or
perpetrator.
Researchers defined sibling bullying as psychological abuse like
saying nasty or hurtful things, physical abuse like hitting or
kicking or pushing, or emotional abuse like telling lies or
spreading hurtful rumors. They put kids in four categories based on
their experiences: victims, bullies, bully-victims who experienced
this as both targets and perpetrators, and those who didn't have any
involvement with these behaviors at all.
[to top of second column] |
They also looked at individual family, parent and child
characteristics like total number of kids at home, mother's marital
status, family socioeconomic background, and exposure to domestic
violence or child abuse.
Overall, 28 percent of the kids in the study were involved in
bullying as victims, perpetrators, or both.
Psychological abuse was most common, affecting 41 percent of victims
and practiced by 34 percent of perpetrators.
A total of about 11 percent of the kids were both bullies and
victims, the study found. About 10 percent reported being only
victims and 7 percent were only perpetrators.
"There are many ways bullying is carried out in families," said
Bonnie Leadbeater, a psychology researcher at the University of
Victoria in Canada.
"Sometimes it is hidden by the victim who fears getting the bully
into trouble," Leadbeater, who wasn't involved in the study, said by
email. "Sometimes there is an 'odd man out' kind of family dynamic
where one child is teased and targeted by the others who think they
are being funny or are deliberately being punitive in a misguided
effort to change what they see as a problem (e.g. the child seems
odd, weak, or cries easily)."
That doesn't mean parents are powerless to change these dynamics.
"One way that parents can prevent bullying and victimization is by
coaching children through strategies about how to handle challenging
situations (like disagreements with siblings)," said Stevie
Grassetti, a psychologist at West Chester University in
Pennsylvania.
"Parents should talk to their children about their values and
expectations and help guide children into interacting with siblings
in prosocial ways. For children who are bystanders to bullying
between siblings, parents should reinforce intervening on behalf of
victims," Grassetti, who wasn't involved in the study, said by
email.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2GURxLO Developmental Psychology, online
February 14, 2019.
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |