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Zur Einführung
(2006)
Wertebilung in der Schule
(2019)
Der vorliegende Beitrag gibt einen Überblick über das Thema „Gewalt an Schulen“ und verknüpft es mit gesundheitlichen Aspekten von Schülerinnen und Schülern. Ausgehend von der Annahme, dass Gewalt und Gesundheit zwei Seiten einer Medaille sind, wird der Frage nachgegangen, wie sich Gewalt- und Mobbingphänomene an deutschen Schulen entwickelt haben und welche Zusammenhänge es zur Gesundheit von Schülerinnen und Schülern gibt. Die empirische Basis bilden langjährige Untersuchungen der Autoren, u. a. im Rahmen der internationalen Studie „Health Behaviour in School-aged Children“ (HBSC). Auf der Basis eigener empirischer Studien werden Prävalenzen und Strukturen der Schülergewalt sowie der Zusammenhang von Gewalt und Gesundheit verdeutlicht und Folgerungen für die Gewalt- und Gesundheitsprävention gezogen. Entgegen dramatisierender Einschätzungen in den Medien zeigt sich, dass in den letzten Jahren eine kontinuierliche Verringerung der Mobbing-Problematik an deutschen Schulen zu verzeichnen ist. Mit Blick auf den Zusammenhang von Gewalt und Gesundheit lässt sich ein signifikanter Zusammenhang zwischen dissozialem Verhalten und Parametern der Gesundheit belegen. So weisen Opfer und Täter-Opfer die größten und Unbeteiligte die geringsten gesundheitlichen Probleme auf, während für Täter – entgegen gängiger Annahmen – eher eine positive Grundstimmung kennzeichnend ist. Aufgrund des engen Zusammenhangs von Gewalt und Gesundheit wird die Folgerung abgeleitet, Gewaltprävention- und Gesundheitsförderung mit Schulentwicklung und Schulprogrammarbeit zu verbinden, um nachhaltige Präventionswirkung zu erzielen.
The article gives an overview of violence at school combined with the health of students. Based on the assumption that violence and health are two sides of the same coin, the article considers the question of the development of violence and bullying phenomena at German schools and its relation to student health. Long-term studies by the authors, such as the international Health Behavior in School-aged Children (HBSC) study, constitute the empirical basis. Prevalence and structures of student violence, as well as the relation between violence and health, are clarified and consequences for the prevention of violence and health are shown on the basis of our own empirical studies. Contrary to dramatic estimates in the media, a continuous reduction of bullying problems at German schools has been registered in recent years. In reference to the relation between violence and health, a significant correlation between dissocial behavior and health parameters was found. Victims and bully-victims show the most health problems and innocent bystanders the least health problems. In contrast to previous findings, bullies show a more positive prevailing mood. Due to the found associations between violence and health, it appears reasonable to combine violence prevention and health promotion measures to achieve sustainable prevention effects.
Although school climate and self-efficacy have received some attention in the literature, as correlates of students’ willingness to intervene in bullying, to date, very little is known about the potential mediating role of self-efficacy in the relationship between classroom climate and students’ willingness to intervene in bullying. To this end, the present study analyzes whether the relationship between classroom cohesion (as one facet of classroom climate) and students’ willingness to intervene in bullying situations is mediated by self-efficacy in social conflicts. This study is based on a representative stratified random sample of two thousand and seventy-one students (51.3% male), between the ages of twelve and seventeen, from twenty-four schools in Germany. Results showed that between 43% and 48% of students reported that they would not intervene in bullying. A mediation test using the structural equation modeling framework revealed that classroom cohesion and self-efficacy in social conflicts were directly associated with students’ willingness to intervene in bullying situations. Furthermore, classroom cohesion was indirectly associated with higher levels of students’ willingness to intervene in bullying situations, due to self-efficacy in social conflicts. We thus conclude that: (1) It is crucial to increase students’ willingness to intervene in bullying; (2) efforts to increase students’ willingness to intervene in bullying should promote students’ confidence in dealing with social conflicts and interpersonal relationships; and (3) self-efficacy plays an important role in understanding the relationship between classroom cohesion and students’ willingness to intervene in bullying. Recommendations are provided to help increase adolescents’ willingness to intervene in bullying and for future research.