Child Maltreatment and the Mediating Effects of Bullying Victimization on School Engagement Among South Korean Youth in Orphanages and a National Sample
Sunghwan Cho, Seon Kim, Hollee A. McGinnis, Traci L. Wike

TL;DR
This study shows that South Korean youth in orphanages face more bullying and lower school engagement, with bullying acting as a key link between maltreatment and poor school performance.
Contribution
The study is novel in examining how bullying mediates the impact of maltreatment on school engagement in orphanage youth compared to a national sample.
Findings
Adolescents in orphanage care reported significantly higher bullying victimization and lower school engagement than the national sample.
Bullying victimization significantly mediated the relationship between child maltreatment and school engagement among orphanage youth.
Negative correlations were found between maltreatment, bullying victimization, and school engagement in the orphanage group.
Abstract
Background: Peer bullying is a global problem affecting youth around the world that can impact youth development including school engagement. The relationship between child maltreatment and school bullying victimization and perpetration is well known. However, few studies have explored the extent of bullying among vulnerable groups of adolescents. Youth in orphanage care may be at higher risk of both maltreatment and bullying because of the circumstances and stigma that brought them into care. This study aimed to examine peer bullying victimization among adolescents residing in orphanage care compared to a national sample of adolescents in South Korea, and to investigate the mediating effect of bullying victimization on the relationship between child maltreatment and school engagement. This comparison allowed for an examination of how caregiving contexts may differentially influence the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Welfare and Adoption · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · Family and Disability Support Research
