DOI of the published preprint https://doi.org/10.18675/1981-8106.v33.n.66.s16671
BELIEFS, SELF-EFFECTIVENESS AND STRATEGIES OF TEACHERS FACING BULLYING
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/SciELOPreprints.2639Keywords:
violence, bullying, teachers, students, strategiesAbstract
This study identified and related violence involving students and teachers, teachers bullying intervention strategies, and their beliefs and perception of self-efficacy to intervene in this problem. With a descriptive and analytical approach, a cross-sectional study was carried out in 2018 with 46 teachers from Guaiúba, Ceará. Three questionnaires were applied. There is a significant prevalence of violence in school environments, with a predominance of indirect and verbal violence regarding aggression from students to teachers. The strategies to draw attention, discuss possible solutions with the class, and comfort the student are more frequent when the problem occurs in the classroom than in the schoolyard. Teachers who were perpetrators of bullying in childhood agree more with normative (p=0,04) and learning beliefs (p=0,03), while teachers who were victims believe that avoidance strategies are inadequate (p=0,02). Therefore, it is necessary to identify teachers' perceptions, beliefs, and history of bullying involvement to build more effective programs to combat school violence.
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Copyright (c) 2021 Geisy Lanne Muniz Luna, Ana Carina Stelko-Pereira, Dayse Lorrane Gonçalves Alves, Steffany Rocha da Silva, Bruna Rodrigues Nunes

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.


