Most Teen Bullying Occurs Among Peers Climbing the Social Ladder

Authored by ucdavis.edu and submitted by mvea
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Teens who bully, harass, or otherwise victimize their peers are not always lashing out in reaction to psychological problems or unhealthy home environments, but are often using aggression strategically to climb their school’s social hierarchy, a University of California, Davis, study suggests. These findings point to the reasons why most anti-bullying programs don’t work and suggest possible strategies for the future.

“To the extent that this is true, we should expect them to target not vulnerable wallflowers, but their own friends, and friends-of-friends, who are more likely to be their rivals for higher rungs on the social ladder,” said Robert Faris, a UC Davis researcher on bullying and author of the paper “With Friends Like These: Aggression From Amity and Equivalence.” The paper was published recently in the American Journal of Sociology. Co-authors are sociologists Diane Felmlee at Pennsylvania State University and Cassie McMillan at Northeastern University.

Faris, a professor of sociology, said friends and associates with close ties to one another likely compete for positions within the same clubs, classrooms, sports and dating subgroups, which heightens the risk of conflict and aggression. This paper is the first known to show that those rivals are often their own friends.

This differs from some common theories and definitions of bullying, in which the behavior stems from an imbalance of power and is mainly directed at youths in the lower social strata in school or community environments who possibly have physical, social or psychological vulnerabilities.

The study focuses, instead, on a broader definition of peer aggression — theorizing that aggression can actually improve the social status of the aggressor.

Using a large, longitudinal social network study of more than 3,000 eighth, ninth and 10th graders in North Carolina over the course of a single school year, the authors found that teens who were friends in the fall were more than three times as likely to bully or victimize each other in the spring of that same school year. This is not merely animosity between former friends who drifted apart: Schoolmates whose friendships ended during the year were three times as likely to bully or victimize each other in the spring, while those whose friendships continued over the school year were over four times as likely to bully those friends, researchers said.

This “frenemy effect” is not explained by the amount of time friends spent together, Faris explained. Additionally, "structurally equivalent" classmates — those who are not necessarily friends, but who share many friends in common — are also more likely to bully or otherwise victimize each other. Compared to schoolmates with no overlapping friendships, those whose friendships are perfectly overlapping are roughly three times more likely to bully each other, and those who share the same bullies or victims are more than twice as likely to bully each other.

Finally, being victimized by friends is particularly painful, and is associated with significant increases in symptoms of depression and anxiety, and significant decreases in school attachment, researchers said.

The paper cites the real-life case of Megan Meier, who hanged herself in 2007 after being bullied by people she thought were her friends — with the added twist of a mother orchestrating the social media bullying scheme. “The tragedy of Megan Meier highlights more than the limitations of the criminal justice system in addressing complex, often subtle, social problems like bullying,” researchers said. The case illustrates the need for research in this area: “… contrary to the once-prevailing view of bullying as a maladjusted reaction to psychological deficiencies, emotional dysregulation, empathy deficits, or problematic home lives, [the perpetrator of the bullying] is one of millions of adolescents who has harmed a schoolmate for instrumental reasons: to exact retribution, achieve prominence, or vanquish a rival,” researchers said. Indeed, the research shows, “the desire for popularity motivates much aggressive behavior.”

Additionally, the researchers conclude, few anti-bullying programs work. “The reason for the typically low success rates, we believe, is that aggressive behavior accrues social rewards, and to a degree that leads some to betray their closest friends. Even the most successful prevention programs are unable to alter the aggressive behavior of popular bullies, who use cruelty to gain and maintain status,” the authors said. The popularity contests ubiquitous in secondary schools, the authors wrote, encourage peer bullying.

The authors suggest that efforts to support and strengthen adolescent friendships — such as broadening extracurricular offerings and hosting camps, trainings and retreats — could help de-emphasize popularity and reduce the “frenemy effect.”

This work was supported by Pennsylvania State University and the National Science Foundation under an IGERT award DGE-1144860, Big Data Social Science.

fiendishrabbit on February 19th, 2021 at 16:15 UTC »

A lot of teachers know about this already. Which is why being a (successful) teacher or youth activity leader is frequently a bit like being mini-machiavelli. Most often in the younger grades before they become teens (9-12) when they're easier to influence and not as good at detecting social manipulation (your social manipulation, not their own inept attempts at it).

When bullies go after someone who you subtly manipulate social dynamics to strengthen the social standing of the victim and reduce the influence of the bully. Does the bully have a hypeman? Cut away the hypeman so that they're not sitting together or working together on assignments. Raise the victims standing by pairing them up with good rolemodels that are caring but higher status. Put the hypeman, victim and a few other students in the same group so that they're more likely to become friends etc.

Ideally by the point when you reach the teenage years the class should respond to attempts at bullying by thinking that it's not cool. You might have to work for years to get to that point and it's never the same game (different moves every time to get to a preferably outcome). It will also frequently make you feel like a horrible person (or at least I frequently feel horrible when doing it). Because you're basically treating people like chesspieces, not people. And it frequently comes at a cost, because I'm going to ruthlessly exploit the peacemakers and likable persons of the class to do some of the work for me (because it's impossible to do all the work yourself. You need the weight of numbers to influence the population pool).

And always be aware that as a person in authority people are frequently nice to you without being nice persons.

I envy teachers who can do this game basically in their sleep, while still coming off as a nice persons (or "nice but stern") and without being emotionally drained to the point of going to sleep (and sleeping for an hour or two) the minute you get home. I don't think I could ever do the work if I also had kids of my own.

Lars_Porsenna on February 19th, 2021 at 15:17 UTC »

That lines up with a suspicion I always had that bullies tend to look for easy targets to score intangible points - call it social standing, brownie points, coolness - and that the easiest people to target are the ones you already know enough about to find what button to push.

And this is the reason why they get hangers-on: they literally are seen as higher scoring people. Never saw a lonely bully.

ThrowAway-47 on February 19th, 2021 at 13:55 UTC »

I think the scale used here is leading to a correct narrative for a single kind of bullying, but I wonder how well it accounts for outliers from social norms.

A person who has a known sexuality other than straight. Someone who was raised in a way that makes them seem more intelligent but also socially stunted. The overweight kid. The one kid to be a different ethnicity than the rest of the school.

I don't think bullying today is the same thing as it was when adult redditors were kids. I'm not saying it is entirely different, just that it's evolved in ways that reflect the change in technology in the hands of kids these days.