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Robyn Cooper ISU: 54%
of LGBT & Allied Youth are Cyberbullying Victims
March 10, 2010
Schools are typically on guard
against students who bully by inflicting repeated violence on other
students. But technology has given rise to a relatively new form of
bullying which inflicts emotional harm in a stealth manner, working
through Web sites, chat rooms, e-mail, cell phones and instant
messaging.
Robyn Cooper, a research
and evaluation scientist at ISU's Research Institute for Studies in
Education; and Warren Blumenfeld, an assistant professor of curriculum
and instruction, have authored a new national study on how often
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and allied youths are victims of
cyberbullying.
And according to a new national study by Iowa State University
researchers, one out of every two lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT)
and allied youths are regular victims of "cyberbullying," which causes
psychological and emotional distress to victims -- producing thoughts of
suicide in some who are repeatedly victimized.
In the online survey of 444 junior high, high school and college
students between the ages of 11 and 22 -- including 350 self-identified
non-heterosexual subjects -- 54 percent of the LGBT and allied youth
reported being victims of cyberbullying in the 30 days prior to the
survey. Cyberbullying includes attacks such as electronic distribution
of humiliating photos, dissemination of false or private information, or
targeting victims in cruel online polls.
Cyberbullying stimulates suicidal thoughts
Among the
non-heterosexual respondents, 45 percent reported feeling depressed as a
result of being cyberbullied, 38 percent felt embarrassed, and 28
percent felt anxious about attending school. More than a quarter (26
percent) had suicidal thoughts.
"There's a saying that we've now changed to read, 'Sticks and stones can
break my bones, but words can kill,'" said Warren Blumenfeld, an Iowa
State assistant professor of curriculum and instruction and the study's
lead author. "And especially at this age -- pre-adolescence through
adolescence -- this is a time when peer influences are paramount in a
young person's life. If one is ostracized and attacked, that can have
devastating consequences -- not only physically, but on their emotional
health for the rest of their lives."
Co-authored by Robyn Cooper, a research and evaluation scientist at
ISU's Research Institute for Studies in Education (RISE), the study is
being published in this month's special LGBT-themed issue of the
International Journal of Critical Pedagogy, which is being released on
Monday, March 15.
The results underscore the helplessness felt by victims of cyberbullying.
Forty percent of the non-heterosexual respondents indicated that their
parents wouldn't believe them if they were being bullied online, while
55 percent reported that their parents couldn't do anything to stop it.
Fifty seven percent also indicated that they didn't think a school
official could do anything to stop it.
"They feared that there might be more retribution by 'tattling,'" said
Blumenfeld, who was bullied as a teen for being gay.
"One of the things we found is that the LGBT students really want to
make a difference," said Cooper, who authored her doctoral dissertation
on minority stress and the well-being of sexual minority college
students. "They want their stories told. They want people to know what
they're going through, but they don't want the repercussions of being
bullied. So being able to respond to this survey was very helpful."
One in four of the LGBT and allied students responded that they needed
to learn how to deal with cyberbullying by themselves. More than half
also feared telling their parents about the cyberbullying because they
might restrict their use of technology, which Blumenfeld says is often
the "lifeline to the outside world" for many young LGBT students who
have been ostracized by their peers at school.
A need for greater peer support
The
ISU study also proposes strategies for cyberbullying prevention. Eighty
percent of the survey's respondents indicated that their peers should do
more to stop it.
"One of the strategies coming out of this study - since respondents
expect and want their peers to step in more - is that we should find
ways on our campuses to empower young people to speak up and act as
allies," Blumenfeld said. "In bullying circles, it's empowering the
bystander to become the upstander to help eliminate the problem."
Blumenfeld and Cooper recommend developing social norms programming at
schools that focus on peer influences that correct misperceived societal
norms.
The ISU researchers plan to author additional papers on their analysis
from this survey. They also have submitted a new grant proposal to
extend their research to a larger national sample that would include
face-to-face interviews and focus groups. |