4.3 Article

School-Based Diversity Education Activities and Bias-Based Bullying Among Secondary School Students

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE
Volume 37, Issue 17-18, Pages NP15992-NP16012

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/08862605211025016

Keywords

adolescence; stigma; bullying prevention; school environment

Funding

  1. University of Minnesota, Department of Pediatrics New Team Science Grant - Minnesota Masonic Charities Fund

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This study found that schools offering diversity education activities have lower rates of bias-based bullying among students compared to those that do not offer such activities. Specifically, for boys, diversity education activities may protect vulnerable students against bullying related to race, sexual orientation, and disability.
Bias-based bullying (e.g., bullying related to race, weight, sexual orientation) is a common experience among youth, yet few school-based prevention programs explicitly address this type of bullying. This study explores whether schools that offer diversity education activities have lower rates of bias-based bullying among students compared to schools that do not offer these activities. Data came from two sources: the 2018 CDC School Profiles Survey (N = 216 schools) and the 2019 Minnesota Student Survey (N = 64,510 students). Multilevel logistic regression tested associations between diversity education activities (diversity clubs, lessons, or special events) and eight types of bias-based bullying among students, with attention to effect modification by relevant demographic characteristics. Students attending schools that offer a wider variety of diversity education opportunities had significantly lower odds of bullying about race, ethnicity, or national origin among boys of color (OR = 0.89, CI: 0.80, 1.00), about sexual orientation for gay, bisexual, and questioning boys (OR = 0.81, CI: 0.67, 0.97), and about disability for boys with a physical health problem (OR = 0.86, CI: 0.76, 0.99). Attending a school with more types of diversity education activities may protect vulnerable students against specific types of bias-based bullying and advance health equity. A diversity education is recommended as a key component of antibullying efforts and policy.

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