This
study reviews characteristics of mobbing incidents in the
federal states of Hesse and Saxony, using data collected
by the HBSC-Study in 2006. It investigates
to what extend, beyond the students’ immigration background,
other individual
variables, as well as classroom and school variables may have
an impact on
mobbing incidents.
Approximately one third of the students indicate
having sometimes been victim
of mobbing, and approximately one out of four students reports
having already
committed this kind of offence. Results reveal that gender,
age, as well as
the immigrant ratio of the student’s class are relevant
factors to mobbing commitment.
The immigration background also has an impact but only in Hesse.
Students with low socioeconomic status have a higher risk of
being victims of
mobbing. Results reveal that classroom ethnical diversity has
a positive effect in
Hesse but ambiguous effects in Saxony.
|