Resilience following emotional abuse by teachers: Insights from a cross-sectional study with Greek students

Date

2018-04-18

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Child Abuse & Neglect, The International Journal
Elsevier

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

An integrative socio-ecological model was developed to investigate the impact of emotional abuse by teachers on children’s psychological functioning and test the role of social support and self-confidence as protective factors associated with resilience. Emotional abuse by teachers, social support from family, peers, school and a significant adult from the community, self-confidence and psychological functioning were assessed in a sample of young Greek school students aged 9–12 years (n = 223, mean age = 10.8, SD = 0.885). Results revealed that exposure to emotional abuse by teachers predicted behavioural problems in school students suggesting a negative effect of these experiences on psychological functioning. The bootstrapped mediation model showed that the impact of emotional abuse by teachers on psychological functioning was significantly diminished through the influence of social support and self-confidence. Also, social support exerted a strong positive impact on self-confidence. This is the first study to show that individual and environmental factors using a socio-ecological model of resilience influence the adverse outcomes of this form of abuse in school aged children. These findings suggest that emotional abuse by teachers should be considered as a potential source of behavioural problems and adjustment in elementary students. Social support through its strong effect on self-confidence is an important protective factor of resilience against emotional abuse by teachers.

Description

open access article

Keywords

Emotional abuse, Resilience, Social support, Self-confidence, Teacher

Citation

Nearchou, F. (2018) Resilience following emotional abuse by teachers: Insights from a cross-sectional study with Greek students. Child abuse & neglect, 78, pp.96-106.

Rights

Research Institute