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Myers, Carrie Anne; Cowie, Helen – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2016
While it has long been recognized that bullying occurs at school and in the workplace, recent research confirms that bullying also takes place among university students, including undergraduates, post-graduates and doctoral research students. In the UK, the National Union of Students (NUS) alerted staff and students to the issue in a series of…
Descriptors: Bullying, College Students, Prevention, Intervention
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Cowie, Helen – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2014
Research into school bullying has traditionally focussed on the actual protagonists--the perpetrators and the targets. Consequently, we know a great deal about the psychological characteristics of bullies and victims and the consequences of bullying in undermining the emotional well-being of both targets and perpetrators. While an understanding of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Bullying, Victims, Intervention
Myers, Carrie-Anne; Cowie, Helen – Pastoral Care in Education, 2013
Sixty university students in three different participant roles--perpetrator, the target and the bystander--took part in a role-play incident of bullying. Participants were asked to describe (i) their perspective on the incident; (ii) their views of the target and the perpetrator and (iii) their solution to the problem. The findings suggest that…
Descriptors: College Students, Bullying, Student Attitudes, Role Playing
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Cowie, Helen; Myers, Carrie-Anne – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2014
This study with 20 university students examined perspectives in three different participant roles: the perpetrator, the target and the bystander. The purpose of the exercise was to resolve the outcome of an alleged incident of cyberbullying using a social network site via the means of a restorative conference. The findings suggest that the power…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Bullying, College Students, Computer Mediated Communication
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Jennifer, Dawn; Cowie, Helen – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2012
This study explored 10- and 11-year-old students' (N = 64) moral emotional attributions in relation to other and self in peer-to-peer bullying scenarios in primary school. Data were gathered using one-to-one semi-structured interviews facilitated by the use of a series of pictorial vignettes depicting a hypothetical story of peer bullying. The…
Descriptors: Bullying, Vignettes, Personality, Empathy
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Cowie, Helen; Myers, Carrie-Anne; Aziz, Rashid – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2017
Across Europe, and in the context of a post-BREXIT situation, society is having to accommodate to large numbers of people from diverse cultures. There is a reported increase in xenophobic incidents, bullying and social exclusion, indicating that diversity runs the risk of intolerance and prejudice. This is played out in all manner of social…
Descriptors: Stranger Reactions, Children, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
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Cowie, Helen; Colliety, Pat – Pastoral Care in Education, 2016
Children who bully have learned to use their power and aggression to control others, a mode that is not conducive to healthy relationships either in the present or in their future lives. Furthermore, there is evidence that children who bully are also likely to have mental health problems that persist into adult life. There are also wide social and…
Descriptors: Bullying, Child Behavior, Individual Characteristics, Peer Relationship
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Cowie, Helen – Children & Society, 2011
In this article, we discuss a range of ways in which children and young people themselves can give adults insights into bullying and how to resolve it. The adoption of peer support within a school can create opportunities for children and young people to be proactive in challenging bullying when they observe it.
Descriptors: Bullying, Young Adults, Children, Social Support Groups
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Boulton, Michael J.; Smith, Peter K.; Cowie, Helen – School Psychology International, 2010
This study tested transactional models to explain the short-term longitudinal links between self-perceptions and involvement in bullying and victimization among 115 9- to 10-year-old children. Self-perceptions were measured with Harter's Self-Perception Profile for Children (six sub-scales) and bullying/victimization by means of peer nominations.…
Descriptors: Bullying, Females, Peer Relationship, Victims of Crime
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Cowie, Helen – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2018
This post script to an article originally written in 2011 takes account of changes that have occurred since then in the ways that children and young people use the social media. Although the fundamental message of the original article remains the same, the post script discusses key ways in which the article would differ if it were being written…
Descriptors: Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication, Coping, Social Media
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Naylor, Paul; Cowie, Helen; Cossin, Fabienne; de Bettencourt, Rita; Lemme, Francesca – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2006
Background: Comparison of teachers' and pupils' definitions of bullying is important for considering the implications for reports of its incidence in schools, for the study of developmental trends in children's and adolescents' perceptions of the phenomenon and for evaluating the effectiveness of interventions designed to combat bullying. Aims: To…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Student Behavior, Definitions, Social Isolation
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Cowie, Helen; Oztug, Ozhan – Pastoral Care in Education, 2008
The research reported in this article was carried out in four secondary schools, two with a peer support system (PS) and two without (NPS) and involved a total of 931 pupils, (49.5 per cent males, and 50.5 per cent females). Participants were aged between 11 and 15 years of age, mean age 12.8 years. The aim was to compare the perceptions of safety…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Student Attitudes, Bullying, School Safety
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Cowie, Helen; Hutson, Nicola; Jennifer, Dawn; Myers, Carrie Anne – Education and Urban Society, 2008
This article documents the important issues of school violence and bullying in the United Kingdom. The authors provide examples of effective interventions for preventing violence and describe some methods, grounded in a restorative and emotional intelligence framework, that have been successfully adopted in U.K. schools. The authors conclude that…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Violence, Foreign Countries, Bullying
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Cowie, Helen; Hutson, Nicky; Oztug, Ozhan; Myers, Carrie – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2008
The research was carried out in four secondary schools, two with a peer support system and two without, and involved a total of 931 pupils (49.5% males and 50.5% females). Participants were aged between 11 and 15 years of age, mean age 12.8 years. The aims were: to compare the perceptions of safety on the part of older and younger pupils in…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Violence, Student Attitudes, Bullying
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Smith, Peter K.; Cowie, Helen; Olafsson, Ragnar F.; Liefooghe, Andy P.D. – Child Development, 2002
Used stick-figure cartoons depicting various peer social situations to investigate meanings given by children in 14 countries to native terms cognate to bullying. Found that 8-year- olds primarily discriminated nonaggressive and aggressive situations; 14-year-olds discriminated fighting versus physical bullying and verbal bullying versus social…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Bullying, Children, Comparative Analysis
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