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Evidence Base

Adolescent involvement in face-to-face and cyber victimization: can personal well-being mediate social-emotional behavior?

Study details

Year: Not reported
Scope: National
Countries: Israel
Methodology: Empirical research – Quantitative
Methods of data collection: Survey
Researched Groups: Children
Children Ages: Other
Other Childrens Age Group: 10-18 years old
Consents: Consent obtained from parents
Informed Consent: Consent obtained
Ethics: Ethical considerations and/or protocol mentioned in the research design
Data Set Availability: Not mentioned

Goals

Social and emotional variables have been independently linked to face-to-face and cyber victimization, but little is known about whether SWB can serve as a mediation effect between loneliness, perceived self-efficacy, and students’ victimization (traditional and cyber). The current study addresses this gap

Related publications

All results