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Understanding types,locations, & perpetrators of peer-to-peer sexual harassment in U.S. middle schools: A focus on sex,racial, and grade differences
Institution:1. University of Florida, Department of Psychology, 945 Center Road, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States;2. Wayne State University, School of Social Work, 5447 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48202, United States;3. Sungkyunkwan University, Dept. of Social Welfare, 25-2 Sungkyunkwan-ro, Jongro-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea;4. University of Illinois, Dept. of Educational Psychology, 220A Education, 1310 S. Sixth Street, Champaign, IL 61820-6925, United States;1. University of Oregon, Department of Psychology, United States;2. Oregon Social Learning Center, United States;3. Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Abstract:This study employed a mixed-method design to examine sexual harassment victimization among American middle school youth (grades 5–8). Students completed a self-report measure of sexual harassment victimization and indicated where sexual harassment occurs in their school. They responded to open-ended questions about the most upsetting incident they experienced and identified characteristics of perpetrators (N = 858). Verbal victimization (e.g., unwanted sexual commentary and homophobic name-calling) was more frequent than physical victimization and sexual assault. The types of sexual harassment experienced and the perpetrators varied by sex, race, and grade level. Sexual harassment occurred most frequently in hallways, followed by classrooms, gym locker rooms, gym class, lunch room, and outside of the school. The most upsetting unwanted incidents included (1) verbal - homophobic language; (2) verbal - sexual commentary and sexual rumor spreading; (3) physical – being touched; (4) pulling down pants; (5) being sexually assaulted; and (6) dismissiveness of victimization. Girls reported other boys as perpetrators; whereas, boys reported their perpetrators as other boys and close friends. For African-American students, perpetrators were identified as older and romantic partners. For White students, perpetrators were reported as same-age peers and friends. Understanding and recognizing what constitutes sexual harassment and where it most commonly occurs among early adolescence is critical to preventing sexual harassment into late adolescence.
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