Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness

Objective: Research suggests that low levels of school belonging and high levels of victimisation predict negative emotions, including loneliness. However, few studies have examined this relation among Chinese elementary school students. The protective role of covitality against victimisation and lo...

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Main Authors: Cixin Wang, Jia Li Liu, Qianyu Zhu, Jocelyn Yao, Dengting Boyanton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Australian Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049530.2021.1904494
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author Cixin Wang
Jia Li Liu
Qianyu Zhu
Jocelyn Yao
Dengting Boyanton
author_facet Cixin Wang
Jia Li Liu
Qianyu Zhu
Jocelyn Yao
Dengting Boyanton
author_sort Cixin Wang
collection DOAJ
description Objective: Research suggests that low levels of school belonging and high levels of victimisation predict negative emotions, including loneliness. However, few studies have examined this relation among Chinese elementary school students. The protective role of covitality against victimisation and loneliness also remains unexplored. This study examines the relations between bullying victimisation, school belonging, covitality, and loneliness over 6 months, and whether covitality moderates the relations between victimisation and loneliness. Method: Eight hundred students from five elementary schools in China completed self‐report surveys at two time points (6 months apart). Results: Bullying victimisation, school belonging, and covitality predicted loneliness 6 months later. Students who experienced more bullying victimisation, lower levels of school belonging, and lower covitality reported more loneliness 6 months later. Covitality buffered the relation between verbal victimisation at Time 1 (T1) and loneliness at T1 but did not buffer the relation between victimisation T1 and loneliness at Time 2 (T2). Conclusions: Schools should prevent bullying, foster school belonging, and promote covitality (positive psychological traits) to reduce Chinese youths' feelings of loneliness. KEY POINTS What is already known about this topic: (1) Victimisation is a risk factor for loneliness for children in the United States. (2) School belonging is a protective factor for loneliness for children in United States. (3) Covitality is a protective factor for youth. What this topic adds: (1) Victimisation is a risk factor for loneliness for children in China. (2) School belonging and covitality are protective factors against loneliness for children in China. (3) Covitality moderates the relation between verbal victimisation and loneliness using cross‐sectional data only.
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spelling doaj.art-453ba748f4d54b5589dcf960d94ac7012023-09-14T13:24:37ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAustralian Journal of Psychology0004-95301742-95362021-01-01731354510.1080/00049530.2021.19044941904494Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and lonelinessCixin Wang0Jia Li Liu1Qianyu Zhu2Jocelyn Yao3Dengting Boyanton4University of MarylandUniversity of MarylandUniversity of MarylandUniversity of MarylandSino‐American Educational Research AssociationObjective: Research suggests that low levels of school belonging and high levels of victimisation predict negative emotions, including loneliness. However, few studies have examined this relation among Chinese elementary school students. The protective role of covitality against victimisation and loneliness also remains unexplored. This study examines the relations between bullying victimisation, school belonging, covitality, and loneliness over 6 months, and whether covitality moderates the relations between victimisation and loneliness. Method: Eight hundred students from five elementary schools in China completed self‐report surveys at two time points (6 months apart). Results: Bullying victimisation, school belonging, and covitality predicted loneliness 6 months later. Students who experienced more bullying victimisation, lower levels of school belonging, and lower covitality reported more loneliness 6 months later. Covitality buffered the relation between verbal victimisation at Time 1 (T1) and loneliness at T1 but did not buffer the relation between victimisation T1 and loneliness at Time 2 (T2). Conclusions: Schools should prevent bullying, foster school belonging, and promote covitality (positive psychological traits) to reduce Chinese youths' feelings of loneliness. KEY POINTS What is already known about this topic: (1) Victimisation is a risk factor for loneliness for children in the United States. (2) School belonging is a protective factor for loneliness for children in United States. (3) Covitality is a protective factor for youth. What this topic adds: (1) Victimisation is a risk factor for loneliness for children in China. (2) School belonging and covitality are protective factors against loneliness for children in China. (3) Covitality moderates the relation between verbal victimisation and loneliness using cross‐sectional data only.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049530.2021.1904494bullying victimisationchinese elementary schoolcovitalitylonelinessschool belonging
spellingShingle Cixin Wang
Jia Li Liu
Qianyu Zhu
Jocelyn Yao
Dengting Boyanton
Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
Australian Journal of Psychology
bullying victimisation
chinese elementary school
covitality
loneliness
school belonging
title Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
title_full Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
title_fullStr Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
title_full_unstemmed Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
title_short Covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
title_sort covitality moderates the relationship between victimisation and loneliness
topic bullying victimisation
chinese elementary school
covitality
loneliness
school belonging
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049530.2021.1904494
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AT jialiliu covitalitymoderatestherelationshipbetweenvictimisationandloneliness
AT qianyuzhu covitalitymoderatestherelationshipbetweenvictimisationandloneliness
AT jocelynyao covitalitymoderatestherelationshipbetweenvictimisationandloneliness
AT dengtingboyanton covitalitymoderatestherelationshipbetweenvictimisationandloneliness