an article by Annalaura Nocentini and Ersilia Menesini (University of Florence, Italy), Juan Calmaestra and Rosario Ortega (University of Cordoba, Spain) and Anja Schultze-Krumbholz and Herbert Scheithauer (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany) published in Australian Journal of Guidance and Counselling Volume 20 Issue 2 (December 2010)
Abstract
This study aims to examine students’ perception of the term used to label cyberbullying, the perception of different forms and behaviours (written, verbal, visual, exclusion and impersonation) and the perception of the criteria used for its definition (imbalance of power, intention, repetition, anonymity and publicity) in three different European countries: Italy, Spain and Germany. Seventy adolescents took part in nine focus groups, using the same interview guide across countries. Thematic analysis focused on three main themes related to:
- the term used to label cyberbullying,
- the different behaviours representing cyberbullying, and
- the three traditional criteria of intentionality, imbalance of power and repetition and the two new criteria of anonymity and publicity.
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