For over 3 decades empirical studies have now been conducted in high schools to systematically evaluate anti-bullying interventions using pre-test/post-test, control group designs. Since Olweus’ (Reference Olweus1993) seminal study in Norway, and Smith's (Reference Smith, Smith, Morita, Junger-Tas, Olweus, Catalano and Slee1999) replication in the United Kingdom, whole-school approaches have been internationally recognised as the best evidence-based method to reduce school bullying. Essentially whole-school approaches are seen as consistent with social-ecological perspectives and they are designed to influence factors associated with preventing and managing reported bullying at the school, the classroom and the individual student level (Swearer, Espelage, Vaillancourt, & Hymel, Reference Swearer, Espelage, Vaillancourt and Hymel2010). According to Rigby, Smith, and Pepler (Reference Rigby, Smith, Pepler, Smith, Pepler and Rigby2004) a whole-school approach generally includes: an anti-bullying policy, school-wide awareness raising, specific curriculum activities, increased monitoring, and a management plan to deal with reported cases of bullying.
International definitions of student bullying vary; however, it is generally acknowledged that bullying in Western schools involves three essential elements. The first of these elements is that the negative actions are repeated (Rigby, Smith, & Pepler). A second element used in defining bullying is that the acts occur in the context of a real or perceived power imbalance, with the more powerful student or group targeting those that are less powerful. The final element of bullying is that it causes harm. Although some authors stress cultural differences in bullying definitions (Hazler & Carney, Reference Hazler, Carney, Jimerson, Swearer and Espelage2010) cross-cultural support for more universal approaches and definitions has been established by Smith, Cowie, Olfasson, and Liefooghe (Reference Smith, Cowie, Olafsson and Liefooghe2002) and in other international collaboration projects such as the Pacific Rim Research Project (Murray-Harvey, Slee, & Taki, Reference Murray-Harvey, Slee, Taki, Jimerson, Swearer and Espelage2010).
Ericson (Reference Ericson2001) identifies physical forms of bullying (hitting, kicking, spitting, pushing, theft), verbal forms (taunting, malicious teasing, name calling, making threats) and psychological forms (spreading rumours, manipulating social relationships, exclusion, extortion and intimidation). In defining cyber-bullying, Hinduja and Patchin (Reference Hinduja and Patchin2009) also acknowledge the three elements of repeated actions, a power imbalance and resulting harm (physical, verbal or psychological). Nevertheless, Dooley, Pyzalski and Cross (Reference Dooley, Pyzalski and Cross2009) have noted some distinct differences exist between cyber-bullying and traditional forms of bullying. It has also been noted that in some cultures (e.g., Japan) psychological or indirect forms of bullying are more prevalent than physical forms of bullying (Murray-Harvey, Slee, & Taki, Reference Murray-Harvey, Slee, Taki, Jimerson, Swearer and Espelage2010).
Several researchers have examined teacher and student definitions of bullying and overlap has been found with research definitions. However, Year 7 and Year 9 students are noted to use less comprehensive definitions than teachers use, and students are less likely to refer to social exclusion or a power imbalance when defining bullying (Naylor, Cowie, Cossin, de Bettencourt, & Lemme, Reference Naylor, Cowie, Cossin, Bettencourt and Lemme2006). Vaillancourt et al. (Reference Vaillancourt, McDougall, Hymel, Krygsman, Miller, Stiver and Davis2008) have also noted that students’ definitions are far less comprehensive than researcher definitions and that when students are given a definition of bullying, they report lower levels of victimisation.
Despite whole-school approaches being recognised as the best, evidence-based interventions for reducing bullying results from published evaluations of high school interventions have been mixed (Ferguson, San Miguel, Kilburn, & Sanchez, Reference Ferguson, Miguel, Kilburn and Sanchez2007; Merrell, Gueldner, Ross, & Isava, Reference Merrell, Gueldner, Ross and Isava2008). Farrington and Ttofi (Reference Farrington and Ttofi2010) have recently completed one of the most robust meta-analyses of published cross-national studies designed to reduce school bullying. Forty-four evaluation studies were included in their analysis and the overall findings showed that on average, school bullying was reduced by 20–23% following whole-school interventions. Reported victimisation by students was reduced by 17–20%.
A variety of effective program elements was identified by Farrington and Ttofi (Reference Farrington and Ttofi2010). These included a whole-school anti-bullying policy; student participation in cooperative, group work exercises; the use of videos; improved supervision/monitoring; and the use of school conferences. In addition, the more elements that were used, the more effective the program was at reducing bullying. Farrington and Ttofi concluded that studies that replicated the original Olweus Bullying Prevention Program tended to be the more effective at reducing bullying prevalence rates.
Internationally wide differences have been noted in the prevalence rates of high school bullying. Comparing 35 countries, Due et al. (Reference Due, Merlo, Harel-Fisch, Damsgaard, Holstein, Hetland and Lynch2009) found adolescent bullying prevalence rates ranged from 5.7% in Swedish schools to 39.8% in schools in the Baltic states. These authors propose that the international differences in bullying prevalence rates were related to the country's level of socio-economic inequality. Countries with the largest levels of inequality had the highest prevalence of school bullying. Ng and Tsang (Reference Ng and Tsang2008) note that in Australia, China, England, Hong Kong, Japan and the United States around 15–25% of students typically report being bullied at school, sometimes or more often over the last term.
Despite varying levels of bullying, the majority of high school students have reported supporting victims and want to see bullying stopped. Nevertheless, it is now well established that many high school students do not intervene when they witness bullying (Cross et al., Reference Cross, Shaw, Hearn, Epstein, Monks, Lester and Thomas2009). Further, informing others of the bullying declines significantly with age. This is especially true in cases of cyber-bullying (e.g., Dooley, Gradinger, Stroheimer, Cross, & Speil, Reference Dooley, Gradinger, Cross, Stohmeier and Spiel2010). Moreover, when students do inform, Cross and her colleagues found the majority tell their friends (64%), their parents/guardians (57%) and lastly their teacher/school staff (46%). Rigby and Bagshaw (Reference Rigby and Bagshaw2003) investigated this phenomenon in detail and argued there was a lack of confidence among many secondary students in their teachers’ perceived capacity to intervene successfully to stop bullying. They found between the ages of 10 and 14 years, the proportion of Australian students who were actively against or who were unsure about collaborating with teachers to stop bullying doubled to approximately 40% of students. Cross et al. also report that 45% of their Australian sample found seeking help from adults resulted in the bullying either staying the same or getting worse.
Anti-Bullying Curriculum Interventions
Curriculum interventions to address bullying typically involve the collection, dissemination and discussion of survey data, the use of worksheets, whole class discussions, role-plays, cooperative learning activities and the use of supplementary literature/video materials. Class exercises are designed to enable students to define bullying, learn about the nature of bullying (physical, verbal and psycho/social), and identify typical bullying scenarios and unsafe areas within the school. Findings that students are more reluctant to inform teachers of bullying as they move through high school and that most high school bullying remains unreported (at least to teachers) underscores the importance of class level, curriculum activities in educating students about bullying and the mechanisms that are available to stop bullying.
Increased Monitoring and Mediation Using the Method of Shared Concern
The need for schools to increase supervision and monitoring of students, particularly in areas outside the classroom, has been widely recognised (e.g., Bernard & Milne, Reference Bernard and Milne2008; Swearer, Espelage, Vaillancourt, & Hymel, Reference Swearer, Espelage, Vaillancourt and Hymel2010). Programs for managing reported bullying within schools vary; however, they typically include discipline interventions and/or the use of mediation. Researchers have pointed out multiple problems with the implementation of traditional punitive approaches for managing school bullying, and mediation approaches have generally been favoured (Campbell, Reference Campbell2005; Rigby, Reference Rigby2005). Specific mediation programs that have been developed to assist schools in the nonpunitive management of bullying include Pikas’ method of Shared Concern (Duncan, Reference Duncan1996, Pikas, Reference Pikas2002; Rigby, Reference Rigby2005); the use of trained peer mediators (Cowie & Hutson, Reference Cowie and Hutson2005; Houlston & Smith, Reference Houlston and Smith2009; Salmivalli, Kaukiainen, & Voeten, Reference Salmivalli, Kaukiainen and Voeten2005) and restorative justice approaches (Morrison, Reference Morrison, Braithwaite and Strang2001; Wong, Cheng, Ngan, & Ma, Reference Wong, Cheng, Ngan and Ma2011).
Pikas’ method of Shared Concern (Pikas, Reference Pikas, Roland and Munthe1989, Reference Pikas2002) involves a five-phase model of teacher/counsellor intervention. The technique is built around a conflict resolution model incorporating discussions with the students involved in the bullying and importantly, follow-up monitoring. In the first phase, the teacher/counsellor talks individually with the students believed to be involved. The goal of the talk is to elicit a nonpunitive, constructive solution to stop the bullying. In the second phase support is given to the student who was bullied and empathy is shown. The option for mediation is presented and encouraged. In the third phase the teacher/counsellor again meets with the student(s) who bullied to ensure they are still committed to the solution and to check no further incidents of bullying have occurred. In the fourth phase the teacher/counsellor mediator holds a summit meeting with all those involved and a specific agreement is reached to prevent the bullying. The final phase involves follow-up to ensure the bullying has ceased.
The aim of this study is to further investigate effective components of a whole-school approach using anti-bullying interventions in four international high schools in Hong Kong. International school settings provide a unique advantage in evaluating the effectiveness of universal, whole-school, anti-bullying approaches due the multicultural mix of the student body. An ERIC search returned no results for anti-bullying interventions in international high school contexts. It was hypothesised that:
1. Interventions that most closely represented a whole-school approach and that included all classes within the high school would be more effective than interventions that only targeted Year 7.
2. The use of a Year 7 only curriculum and mediation intervention (the Shared Concern approach) would reduce bullying levels across the Year 7 cohort.
3. The use of the Shared Concern method of mediation for reported bullying would result in reduced bullying across the Year 7 cohort.
Method
Participants
Twenty-one Year 7 classes located in four, international co-educational secondary schools in Hong Kong participated in the study. Students from each school were already allocated into Year 7 classes/houses and completed the questionnaires and curriculum interventions within their classes. In Hong Kong, Year 7 is the first year of high school entry. All Year 7 students who were present at their school on the survey days were given the opportunity to take part. A small number of questionnaires (n = 14 or 1%) were rejected from the final analysis due to extensive missing data or highly inconsistent responses that could not be logically coded. From the pre-test, a total of 545 valid questionnaires were included in the analysis. At the 7-month follow-up 549 valid questionnaires were obtained.
Measures
The secondary school, English version of the Olweus (Reference Olweus, Pepler and Rubin1991) self-report questionnaire was used to assess the incidence of bullying. Students had not previously completed the questionnaire and it includes a standard definition of bullying. A bullying composite score was used to measure changes in bullying over time and this measure was adopted for the current analysis. The bullying composite score comprises the sum of questionnaire items rating the frequency of being excluded or being indirectly bullied (item 4), the frequency of being bullied (item 5) and the frequency of taking part in bullying others (item 19).
In order to monitor the implementation of the intervention, a brief checklist was devised for teachers involved in the intervention schools. The checklist asked teachers in the intervention schools whether they had delivered the various components of the program, how they had managed reported incidents of bullying and for their personal reactions to the interventions.
Design
Program effectiveness was evaluated using a factorial, quasi-experimental design incorporating pre/post-test, non-equivalent control groups (Campbell & Stanley, Reference Campbell and Stanley1963). The design offers the greatest control of extraneous variables when random assignment of subjects to conditions is not possible. A further advantage of the design is that since existing class arrangements and teachers were used for the intervention, possible threats from reactive arrangements that can occur when students know they are under investigation, were minimised (Gay & Airasian, Reference Gay and Airasian2000).
Bullying in secondary schools is typically found to peak during the early years (e.g., Cross et al., Reference Cross, Shaw, Hearn, Epstein, Monks, Lester and Thomas2009) and only data for Year 7 students was included in this analysis. The four schools that participated in the study had the same administrative structures, funding and each taught the same ‘localised’ British National Curriculum. This involved adaptations for the Hong Kong/international context. Schools were randomly assigned to one of the following four conditions:
Condition (a) Whole-school intervention for all years;
Condition (b) Curriculum and Shared Concern intervention at Year 7;
Condition (c) Shared Concern intervention only at Year 7;
Condition (d) Control school.
Procedure
Students anonymously and confidentially completed the questionnaires in class time. Year 7 teachers monitored the administration of the questionnaire using standardised instructions under test conditions. The initial pre-test was administered towards the end of the students’ first term in Year 7. The post-test was administered at the end of the final term. On each occasion, students were asked to answer the questions about bullying during their current term (i.e., to focus on the last 2/3 months). Those schools implementing the interventions used the second and third term to complete the program. Ethical and school administrative approvals were gained before the research commenced.
In the school assigned to condition (a) the intervention was conducted throughout the whole school. This intervention reflected most clearly a ‘whole-school approach’ as described within the literature. The intervention commenced with an assembly where summary feedback from the pre-test questionnaires was provided and students were encouraged to become involved in the development of a whole-school anti-bullying policy. Three lessons, delivered by the class teachers, were then devoted to raising awareness of bullying and school solutions. The lessons were introduced through a video on school bullying and a class discussion. In the second week, students worked in small groups to identify the types of bullying in the school and to discuss strategies to prevent bullying. Bullying scenarios with discussion questions were also prepared. In the third week a worksheet on possible responses to bullying was given to students, and teachers were provided with supplementary role play activities. Existing discipline procedures were utilised to manage bullying, and no formal mediation procedures were implemented.
In the school assigned to condition (b) the above information raising and curriculum activities were replicated except the activities were limited to Year 7 students. Schools in condition (b) and condition (c) adopted the Shared Concern mediation intervention for the management of reported bullying. These schools were given an initial briefing and a package of readings that described the technique. The technique was then role-played with the Year 7 coordinators and two support meetings were held with relevant teachers during the intervention period to review the implementation of the Shared Concern method.
Results
The data were subjected to several ANOVA procedures in order to investigate the hypothesis that bullying would be reduced significantly following the anti-bullying interventions and that whole-school interventions would be more successful than other/no intervention. Pre-test and post-test class levels of bullying were examined using a two-way repeated measures ANOVA. Class composite bullying scores were used as the dependent variable. The results confirmed a highly significant main effect for all schools (F = 7.70, p < .001). The interaction between pre-test and post-test scores was also found to be highly significant (F = 5.23, p < .009). Mean pre-test/post-test composite bullying scores for each school are presented in Figure 1.
Student self-reported bullying in condition (a) a whole-school intervention and condition (b) a curriculum and Shared Concern intervention at Year 7 only, was significantly reduced at post-test. In contrast, students reported that overall bullying increased at post-test in the school in condition (c) a Shared Concern only intervention at Year 7. Similarly, student reported bullying increased over the school year in condition (d) the control school. Although these increases were not statistically significant, at post-test students in the Year 7 Shared Concern only intervention and the control school reported the highest levels of overall bullying.
Separate one-way ANOVAs for each school confirmed the above findings. Using the bullying composite score as the dependent variable, a highly significant reduction, F(1, 162) = 10.73, p < .001, in bullying was found for the school in condition (a) whole-school intervention. The reduction equated to a 16% decline in overall Year 7 bullying. When the answers to the question, ‘How often have you been bullied at school this term?’ (item 5) was used as the bullying measure, a significant reduction, F(1, 277) = 3.44 p < .05, in bullying was also found in condition (b) a curriculum and Shared Concern intervention at Year 7.
Discussion
Results from the whole-school intervention provide support for the first hypothesis that school bullying can be reduced significantly through multiple component interventions that form part of a whole-school approach. The greatest reductions in bullying occurred when the components of the whole-school approach were delivered to all classes/years within the high school.
Consistent with hypothesis 2, declines following intervention at the Year 7 level were found; however, the declines were less than when the interventions occurred at all year levels. This may partly relate to the fact that a proportion of bullying in high schools occurs across years. Students in the Hong Kong international schools studied, for example, reported that they were equally likely to be bullied by someone from their own year level as from someone in a higher year.
Hypothesis 3, which predicted that the Shared Concern mediation intervention delivered at the Year 7 level would be effective in reducing overall bullying, was not supported. Overall, reported levels of student bullying increased over the school year in this condition. Nevertheless, teacher feedback from the schools that used the Shared Concern method was surprisingly favourable. The finding may be explained by a number of factors. As the majority of bullying traditionally does not come to the attention of school authorities (only 19% of the students in the Hong Kong international schools studied informed a teacher of bullying) the extent to which interventions at the individual, mediation/counselling level can be effective in reducing overall bullying is extremely limited despite teacher feedback that the technique proved useful in the management of individual episodes of reported bullying.
Similarly, peer mediation programs have not been empirically linked with significant reductions in overall bullying (Farrington & Ttofi, Reference Farrington and Ttofi2010). For example, Houlston and Smith's (Reference Houlston and Smith2009) report on the effects of a comprehensive, 1-year peer mediation intervention at an all-girl London secondary school found no reduction in overall bullying levels at the end of Year 7, Year 8 and Year 9.
Findings that mediation interventions have not been associated with reductions in overall bullying may result from a failure to address issues for students who do not report bullying episodes to school authorities. The appropriateness of mediation in cultural contexts where more authoritarian approaches to discipline are traditionally favoured over authoritative approaches has received little attention in the literature. Nevertheless, Wong et al. (Reference Wong, Cheng, Ngan and Ma2011) have recently reported significant reductions in school bullying following the implementation of a restorative, whole-school intervention in Hong Kong.
Teacher feedback about the curriculum activities that were used was generally very positive. Role-play was the most controversial activity in the curriculum intervention, and teacher opinion was divided on this activity. Half of the teachers’ comments were positive and half were unsure of the usefulness of the technique. One teacher was concerned that role-play could provide opportunities for further bullying. This comment reinforces the necessity to provide support and alternatives for teachers who are not familiar with using activities or instructional strategies that are part of curriculum interventions. This support role could be ideally provided by school psychologists/counsellors.
Farrington and Ttofi (Reference Farrington and Ttofi2010) concluded that an important component of effective whole-school anti-bullying programs is the use of sanctions/discipline procedures for bullying. Although the use of sanctions/discipline is not necessarily inconsistent with the use of mediation, many studies have reviewed only one or other of the approaches and further research into this area is warranted. Evidence from the United States suggests that ‘zero-tolerance’ policies may not in fact make schools safer (Tanner, Reference Tanner2009). Tanner notes that zero-tolerance policies have been linked to increased suspensions/expulsions and that the policies are most likely to be applied to visible minority students. He argues that schools that are able to elicit support and commitment for their policies from the whole of the student body (not just the academically achieving students) will be more effective in preventing bullying. Notions of using the least restrictive alternative for school discipline have been advocated for several decades, and the results from the Hong Kong international school study support the use of whole-school programs as an effective intervention at the preventative level.
A possible limitation of the study was that different levels of bullying were evident in each of the schools prior to the commencement of the intervention. The success or otherwise of any intervention program may be influenced by the initial levels of bullying in a school. A second limitation is that although the use of anonymous questionnaires has been the mainstay of most evaluation studies, research from Canada suggests that confidential surveys with students providing their names may be just as effective (Chan, Myron, & Crawshaw, Reference Chan, Myron and Crawshaw2005). A further issue in evaluating mediation interventions is that composite school/class levels of bullying may not be a sensitive enough measure to determine if specific techniques such as the method of Shared Concern are effective at the individual level of intervention. The need for schools to work closely with parents in countering bullying has been identified as an effective component in whole-school approaches, and the degree to which this occurred in the international schools was not systematically investigated.
Conclusion
Consistent with Farrington and Ttofi's (Reference Farrington and Ttofi2010) conclusion, this study highlights the fact that schools that include a greater number of successfully evaluated components in their anti-bullying intervention programs can expect the greatest declines in student bullying. The results provide strong support for the use of a whole-school approach for the prevention and management of bullying in high schools. Lessons from this research and the recent comprehensive meta-analysis of bullying interventions over the last 30 years conducted by Farrington and Ttofi provide strong support for schools to:
• adopt a formal, whole-school anti-bullying policy
• use school conferences/assemblies to raise awareness of bullying
• systematically address bullying across all years/classes through anti-bullying curriculum activities
• use anti-bullying videos
• provide teacher training/support in the use and implementation of anti-bullying policies
• improve out of class supervision and monitoring
• actively include parents in anti-bullying programs through training/meetings/information sessions
• use disciplinary methods/sanctions for bullying
• improve classroom management/classroom rules
• encourage student participation in cooperative, group work exercises.