• Title/Summary/Keyword: 가해행동

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Bullying Experience of School Bullies on Convergence Study (학교폭력 가해 청소년의 가해 경험에 대한 융합 연구)

  • Song, Yul-Mai
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.349-359
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this study is to explore and deeply understand the essence and meaning of the bullying experiences of school bullies. Data were collected through in-depth dividual interviews and analyzed using Colaizzi phenomenological analysis methodology. Participants of this study were 16 adolescents with compulsory education due to school bullying. Data collection was conducted through in-depth interviews from May to August, 2018. The results of the analysis were derived from 13 theme clusters and 5 categories, focusing on causes of school bullying, factors contributing bullying, and experiences after bullying. Bullying experienced by school bullies were categorized as followed: 'Difficult to empathize with others', 'Uncontrolled anger behavior', 'No hope for the future'. 'Gain from bullying', and 'Difficulty of daily life'. The results of this study are significant in providing basic data to provide practical help and support to school bullies.

Social Behaviors, Psychosocial Adjustments, and Language Ability of Aggressive Victims, Passive Victims, and Bullies in Preschool Children (또래 괴롭힘 공격적 피해, 수동적 피해 및 가해 유아의 사회적 행동, 심리사회적 적응과 언어능력)

  • Shin, Yoo-Lim
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.1-12
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    • 2011
  • This study investigated prevalence rates and differences in social behaviors, psychosocial adjustments, and language ability of preschool children who engaged in bully/victim subgroups: aggressive victims, passive victims, bullies, and non-involved. The participants were 297 preschool children and their teachers in Jeju City. The teachers measured children's peer victimization, social behaviors, and teacher-child relationships. Children's language ability and self-concept were also assessed by individual interview. There were significant differences in social behaviors, psychosocial adjustments, and language ability among the bully/victim subgroups. Aggressive victims included in a high risk group characterized by a high level of aggression, ADHD, peer rejection as well as conflicted relationships with teachers. Moreover, they had limited language ability. The findings highlight behavioral heterogeneity among the bully/victim subgroups in early childhood.

Study on cyberbullying among adolescent bystanders - focusing on the empathy of middle school students - (사이버불링을 목격한 중학생 주변인의 실태 및 영향 변인 연구)

  • Ko, Ahra;Choi, Saeeun
    • Journal of Korean Home Economics Education Association
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.79-95
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    • 2016
  • This study aims to explore the reality of middle school students witnessing cyberbullying and their types of behaviors after witnessing and to examine the role of empathy affecting the behaviors of bystanders of cyberbullying. For this purpose, we collected the survey data from 595 middle school students in the Gyeong-Gi region. Results show that 61.2% of the respondents report the witness of cyberbullying, Among which cyber slander is the most common, followed by spreading false information, outcast, sexual harassment, and extortion. The behaviors of bystanders who witnessed cyberbullying are categorized into spectating, defending, agreeing, or doing nothing. When it comes to the role of the students' empathy, findings show that the 'empathic concern' and 'personal pain' -, parts of emotional empathic abilities, can significantly influence behaviors of cyberbullying bystanders. These findings not only call the attention to the seriousness of cyberbullying among middle school students, but they also suggest the implication that emotion empathy education is required along with emotion control education.

The Effect of Childhood Experience of Child Abuse on the Adolescent-To-Parent Abuse: With a Focus on the Moderating Effects of Positive Relationship with Friends (성장기 학대경험이 청소년의 부모폭력에 미치는 영향 : 긍정적 친구관계의 조절효과를 중심으로)

  • Kim, Jae Yop;Ryu, Won Jung;Kim, Joon Beom
    • Korean Journal of Social Welfare Studies
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    • v.47 no.1
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    • pp.5-27
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to 1) investigate the prevalence rate of the abuse of parents by their teenage children and the effect of child abuse on parent abuse, 2) examine moderating effect of positive friend relationships on violence toward parents, and 3) provide the implication to the adolescent-to-parent abuse. In order to accomplish these purposes, a total of 1,601 who are middle and high school students in Seoul and Gyeonggi province were utilized. Data were analyzed by frequency analysis, and Poisson regression model analysis with SPSS 21.0. The main results of this study are as follows. Frist, prevalence of parent abuse were 12.8%. Second, 40.6% of adolescents have childhood experience of abuse, and this experience has significant relationships with perpetrating behavior toward parents. Lastly, adolescents' positive relationships with friends play an important role in moderating parent abuse. These findings suggest that there is a strong need to formulate the multilateral approaching system to the parent who are victims of abuse and perpetrating adolescents in order to understand the characteristics adolescent-to-parent violence problems and intervene effectively in diverse systems. Political and practical implications on parent abuse preventive programs and coping strategies are discussed.

Motivation for Alcohol Use, Problem Drinking, Family Alcohol Use and Dating Violence among College Students (음주 동기, 문제음주 및 음주 가족력과 대학생의 데이트 폭력)

  • Kyung Hyun Suh
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.61-78
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    • 2003
  • The researcher examined the relationship between dating violence and drinking behaviors. Study participants included 440 Korean College students(184 males and 256 females) currently involved in heterosexual dating relationships. Participants' ages ranged from 17 to 30(M=20.08, SD=1.89). Questionnaires and psychological tests used included: Straus' Conflict Tactics Scale, Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test(AUDIT), Cooper's Revised Drinking Motives Questionnaire(DMQ), and Index of Family Alcohol Use. Research designs were 2(gender) × 2(experience of inflicting dating violence), i.e. 2-way MANOVAs. Results suggest students who drink one or more times a week are more likely to commit acts of violence toward their dating partners than students drinking less often. The study revealed males tend to drink with higher social, enhancement, conformity and coping motives than females. The study also showed that students inflicting dating violence drank with higher coping motives than students who did not. Males showed more hazardous, dependent and harmful drinking patterns than females. Also, students who had inflicted dating violence showed a higher degree of these characteristics (hazardous, dependent and harmful drinking patterns) along with a greater family history of alcohol use than participants who had not inflicted dating violence. The findings showed significant 2-way interactions in dependent and harmful drinking patterns. Simple main effect analysis revealed that differences in dependent and harmful drinking patterns in males are more significant than the same differences in females.

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Fruit Dieting Behavior of Black-billed Magpies, Azure-winged Magpies, and Brown-eared Bulbuls in the Cage (사육상에서 까치, 물까치, 직박구리의 과실먹이 섭식행동)

  • Song, Jang-Hoon;Shin, Gil-Ho;Cho, Young-Sik;Park, Jang-Hyun;Lee, Han-Chan
    • Horticultural Science & Technology
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.85-89
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    • 2012
  • To investigate the bird's dieting behavior for several fruits in orchards, this study was carried out in 2008. Black-billed magpies (Pica pica), azure-winged magpies (Cyanopica cyanus), and brown-eared bulbuls (Hypsipetes amaurotis) made their unique marks on the surface of pear and apple fruits; black-billed magpies pecked fruits strongly and left round holes with perpendicular angle, whereas those of azure-winged magpies and brown-eared bulbuls were sack-shaped with narrow neck and marked unique stripes on the skin. For the fruits of pear and apple from bagging practices, the birds showed different foraging behavior; black-billed magpies could injure all kinds of fruits whether with paper bags or not, but azure-winged magpies and brown-eared bulbuls could not attack the fruits with paper bag. Azure-winged magpies and brown-eared bulbuls preferred pear fruits to those of apples and satsuma mandarins in the cage trials. To reduce the injuries by azure-winged magpies and brown-eared bulbuls on pear and apple fruit, wrapping bag should not be impaired. Introducing azure-winged magpies to Cheju should be prohibited for the potential citrus injury by them.

Juvenile Offenders' Experience of Music Therapy within the Framework of Self-determination: A Modified Grounded Theory Study (조건부 기소유예 판결을 받은 학교폭력 가해 청소년의 음악치료 경험에 관한 연구: 자기결정성을 중심으로)

  • Yun, Juri
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.63-82
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    • 2014
  • This qualitative study investigated how a music therapy program was experienced by juvenile offenders of school violence who were under a conditional suspension of indictment. Six adolescents participated in 12 consecutive weeks of group music therapy sessions, and were interviewed individually based on open-ended questions addressing key constructs of self-determination theory, which are autonomy, competence and relatedness. Using this framework, data was deductively analyzed using a modified grounded theory. The analysis also investigated how such impact of music therapy transferred or expanded to their everyday life. The analysis revealed that the properties of autonomy included making choices of songs and instruments, deciding how to play, and expressing opinions about music. Competence was associated with developing skills on musical instruments, creating own music, concentrating on their own project, and demonstrating their abilities. Relatedness were related to collaborating, exchanging opinions, and playing a part in musical projects. In addition, it was found that they also experienced shifts in consciousness and behavior, expanded self-awareness, and mutual exchange and group support. Lastly, it was revealed that the positive emotional and behavioral changes they experienced in music also appeared in their school life.

Influence of the change of driving confidence level upon driving behavior in the age groups (운전확신수준의 변화가 연령별 운전행동에 미치는 영향)

  • Soonyeol Lee;Soonchul Lee;Sunjin Park
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
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    • v.12 no.3
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    • pp.23-47
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this research is to study the relation between the change of driver's driving confidence level in the age categories and driving behavior. To survey the driving confidence level, we used the 'Driving Confidence Scale' questionnaire and surveyed the drive career, mileage, driving days, violation of traffic regulation (drunk driving, overspeed), traffic accident experience (assaulter, sufferer) together. The subjects of investigation were from 19-year-old to 80-year-old and 1,055 persons were participated in the research totally. To examinethe structure of driving confidence level, we executed the factor analysis. We compared the driving confidence level in the age categories (under 29-year-old, 30~39, 40~49, 50~64, over 65-year-old) and studied the relation between driving confidence level and driving behavior. Driving confidence level was composed of 4 factors such as 'insensibility to situation', 'unsafe driving', 'careless concentration' and 'self-efficacy of driving', and there was decreasing tendency for driving confidence level and overall driving behavior according to increasing age. Driving confidence level had the interrelation with age range, assaulting accident, suffered accident, driving period, drunk driving, overspeed, driving career and so on. We examined the difference of driving confidence level and driving behavior by dividing the participated drivers' groups into the traffic accident experienced group, drunk driving group and overspeed driving group, and there was a significant difference on driving confidence level and driving behavior between the group who had not experienced the violation of traffic regulation or traffic accident and another group who had experienced the violation of traffic regulation or traffic accident.

Validation and Development of the Driving Stress Scale (운전 스트레스 척도(Driving Stress Scale: DSS)의 개발과 타당화 연구)

  • Soon yeol Lee;Soon chul Lee
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.21-40
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    • 2008
  • This study was intended to validate and develop the driving stress scale. In a preliminary investigation, literature studies on the stress and open questionnaire were administered and examined in four regions in Korea. As a result, 121 items driving stress questionnaire were developed. In the study, this driving stress questionnaire was examined to 450 drivers located seven regions in Korea. The factors analysis revealed 5 meaningful factors[(Progress Obstacle: PO), (Traffic Circumstance: TC), (Accident & Regulation: AR), (Regulation Observance: RO), (Time Pressure: TP)] with 38 items. When internal consistency for each 5 factor was calculated, all sub-scale revealed a satisfactory level of Cronbach's α. Also, correlations with Driving Behaviour Inventory-General Driver Stress(DBI-GEN) and risk driving behaviors(speed driving, drunken driving, offence accident, defence accident) supported consistently validity of the Driving Stress Scale(DSS). Finally the result were discussed and implications are suggested for future studies.

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Bullying and Victimization with Perception of Parenting Behaviors among Elementary School Children (학령기 아동이 지각한 부모의 양육행동 및 또래 괴롭힘 경험)

  • Ro, Kyung-son;Sim, Hee-og
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.241-257
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    • 2004
  • Data were collected from 514 elementary school students from 1st to 6th grade with questionnaires on Parental Behavior, Bullying, and Peer-Victimization. Sixth graders reported the lowest perception of warmth-acceptance, and 1st graders reported the highest perception of rejection-restriction by fathers. Males perceived more parental rejection-restriction. Children perceived more warmth-acceptance from mothers, and they perceived more permissiveness-nonintervention from fathers. Parenting behaviors were significantly related to bullying and victimization. The Bullying/Victimization group reported the lowest parental warmth-acceptance. Both Victimization and Bullying/Victimization groups showed higher parental rejection-restriction than other groups. The Victimization group showed highest paternal permissiveness-nonintervention. Victimization and Bullying/Victimization groups reported higher maternal permissiveness-nonintervention than other groups.

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