The effectiveness of moral disengagement and social norms as anti-bullying components: A randomized controlled trial.
Chloé TolmatcheffBenoit GalandIsabelle RoskamRené VeenstraPublished in: Child development (2022)
This three-armed randomized controlled trial examined how moral disengagement and social norms account for change in bullying behavior and their potential as targets of anti-bullying components within separate interventions among 1200 French-speaking Belgian elementary students (48% boys, 9-12 year-olds, 57 classes, nine schools) during 2018-2019 (no ethnicity data available). Mediation analysis revealed that students' moral disengagement successfully decreased (β = -.46), which, in turn, reduced both bullying (β = .33) and outsider behaviors (β = .20), and increased defending (β = -.10). Intervening on social norms decreased bullying (β = -.18), but not through the perceived injunctive class norm as intended. Guidelines to open the "black box" of anti-bullying programs and determine the cost-effectiveness ratio of their components are provided.
Keyphrases
- high school
- randomized controlled trial
- mental health
- healthcare
- physical activity
- systematic review
- social support
- study protocol
- public health
- depressive symptoms
- minimally invasive
- decision making
- electronic health record
- single cell
- big data
- risk assessment
- machine learning
- quantum dots
- deep learning
- fluorescent probe