The Friendly Schools Project: an empirically grounded school-based bullying prevention program

Category Primary study
JournalAustralian Journal of Guidance and Counselling
Year 2003
There exists limited empirical evidence of the effectiveness of universal school-based interventions to reduce or prevent children's bullying. The Friendly Schools project was a 3-year longitudinal randomised control trial designed to determine the efficacy of a universal holistic intervention to prevent or reduce bullying among primary school children. The trial involved 1968 Western Australian children, their parents and their teachers. This paper discusses the components of the Friendly Schools program, and how empirical, theoretical and 'promising' mechanisms of change (mediators) were operationalised to develop a whole-of-school approach to reduce bullying. This paper concludes that further change mediate improvements in children's bullying behaviour and mental health status and the relative contribution of the various components of a whole-of-school approach to bullying prevention and reduction in children.
Epistemonikos ID: a6a2c98c649b90c2e7b041f7f926271d38d589ae
First added on: May 06, 2014