16 results on '"Donna Cross"'
Search Results
2. School bullying: moving beyond a single school response to a whole education approach
- Author
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James O’Higgins Norman, Christian Berger, Shoko Yoneyama, and Donna Cross
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Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Education - Published
- 2022
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3. Exploring offending characteristics of young people with foetal alcohol spectrum disorder in Western Australia
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Grace Kuen Yee Tan, Carmela F. Pestell, James Fitzpatrick, Donna Cross, Isabelle Adams, and Martyn Symons
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Law ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Published
- 2022
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4. RE-AIM evaluation of a teacher-delivered programme to improve the self-regulation of children attending Australian Aboriginal community primary schools
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Rochelle Watkins, Jane Latimer, Martyn Symons, Jonathan R. Carapetis, Evan M. Adams, John Boulton, James P. Fitzpatrick, Edie Wright, Bree Wagner, Donna Cross, and Trevor G. Mazzucchelli
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Self ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Fetal alcohol syndrome ,050301 education ,Alcohol abuse ,Self-control ,medicine.disease ,Indigenous ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Rural area ,Faculty development ,Psychiatry ,business ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Studies in north-western Australia Aboriginal communities identified executive functioning and behavioural regulation as significant issues for children. Exposure to alcohol prenatally and adverse ...
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- 2019
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5. A group randomized controlled trial evaluating parent involvement in whole-school actions to reduce bullying
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Amy Barnes, Donna Cross, Natasha Pearce, Shelley Beatty, and Leanne Lester
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Self-efficacy ,Knowledge level ,education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Interpersonal communication ,Peer relationships ,Affect (psychology) ,Education ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Cohort ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Parents can significantly affect children's peer relationships, including their involvement in bullying. The authors developed and evaluated ways to enhance parents’ knowledge, self-efficacy, attitudes, and skills related to parent–child communication about bullying. The 3-year Friendly Schools Friendly Families whole-school intervention included a family component, which provided training and resources to support school teams to engage families in awareness-raising and skill-building activities. Over 3,200 parents of the Grade 2, 4, and 6 cohorts were recruited. For the Grade 2 and 4 cohorts at both 10 and 22 months postintervention, the family component increased parents’ self-efficacy to talk about bullying with their children and their frequency of doing so. Grade 4 parents reported more provictim attitudes at 22 months. No differences were found for the Grade 6 cohort. These data suggest a whole-school capacity-building intervention in early and middle childhood can improve the likelihood and...
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- 2016
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6. Adolescent Bystander Behavior in the School and Online Environments and the Implications for Interventions Targeting Cyberbullying
- Author
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Donna Cross, Alfred Allan, and Lisa J. Patterson
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business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Psychological intervention ,050301 education ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Suicide prevention ,Education ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Bystander effect ,Medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Computer-mediated communication ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,business ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The aim of this study was to add to the emerging knowledge about the role of bystanders in cyberbullying. To differentiate online versus offline bystander behaviors, 292 Australian children (mean age = 15.2; female = 54.4%) reviewed hypothetical scenarios experimentally manipulated by bystander sex, relationship to target and perpetrator, and severity of bullying incident. In both environments, bystander helping behaviors were more likely when the target was a close friend, perceived harm to the target was high, and when bystanders were female. Bystanders also reported being less likely to approach teachers or publicly defend targets in online versus offline environments. This suggests programs designed to encourage positive bystander behaviors online can be similar to face-to-face approaches, but they need to recognize some aspects unique to the online environment.
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- 2016
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7. Using Systems Theory to Understand and Respond to Family Influences on Children's Bullying Behavior: Friendly Schools Friendly Families Program
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Amy Barnes and Donna Cross
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Social connectedness ,Aggression ,Intervention (counseling) ,Parenting styles ,medicine ,Poison control ,Interpersonal communication ,medicine.symptom ,Affect (psychology) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Education ,Social influence - Abstract
This article addresses Systems Theory as it applies to school-age children's bullying behavior. It focuses on the interrelationships, mutual influences, and dynamics of relationships within the family, and how these may affect children's behavior toward their peers. The theory helps to explain the ways family patterns are reflected in children's negative interactions with peers, particularly bullying behavior. As such, Systems Theory was used to guide development of the content and strategies that formed the family component of Friendly Schools Friendly Families, a whole-school bullying prevention intervention. The intervention was designed to systematically target parenting factors identified as protective of bullying behavior and other problem behaviors, including parent–child communication, parent modelling, parenting style, parent bullying attitudes and beliefs, normative standards about bullying, family management techniques, connectedness, and cohesion. This whole-school program thus actively engage...
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- 2014
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8. Do emotional and behavioural difficulties in primary school predict adolescent victimisation trajectories?
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Donna Cross and Leanne Lester
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education ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Victimisation ,Social relation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Prosocial behavior ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,At-risk students ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Chronic victimisation in adolescence is a traumatic experience with potential negative long-term health consequences. Given that victimisation has been shown to increase over the transition from primary to secondary school, longitudinal data from 1810 students transitioning from primary to secondary school were used to identify victimisation trajectory groups; classified as low-increasing, low-stable, medium-stable and not-bullied. Males with emotional and behavioural difficulties (both internalising and externalising behaviours) and females with externalising behaviours were more likely to be in the increasing and stable victimised groups than the not-bullied group. The results of this study suggest whole-school bullying intervention programmes need to occur before students reach secondary school, and that transition programmes need to emphasise and support social interaction between peers to reduce victimisation and the harms caused by long-term exposure to bullying.
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- 2014
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9. Developmental trajectories of adolescent victimization: Predictors and outcomes
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Donna Cross, Therese Shaw, Leanne Lester, and Julian Dooley
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Social Psychology ,Longitudinal data ,education ,Psychological intervention ,Loneliness ,social sciences ,Peer support ,Mental health ,humanities ,Developmental psychology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,medicine ,Anxiety ,Social determinants of health ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,health care economics and organizations ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Chronic victimization negatively affects mental health, making it crucial to understand the key predictive social health (e.g., loneliness, isolation) factors. Evidence suggests that the effects of victimization are worse over the transition from primary to secondary school. Longitudinal data from 1810 students transitioning were used to identify victimization trajectory groups, classified as low increasing, low stable, medium stable, and not bullied. Adolescents with poorer social health were more likely to be in the increasing and stable victimized group than in the not bullied group. Students in the low increasing victimized group had poorer mental health outcomes than those in the stable and not bullied groups. The results of this study have important implications for the type and timing of school-based interventions aimed at reducing victimization and the harms caused by long-term exposure.
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- 2013
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10. Problem behaviours, traditional bullying and cyberbullying among adolescents: longitudinal analyses
- Author
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Therese Shaw, Donna Cross, and Leanne Lester
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Longitudinal study ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychological intervention ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Psychology ,Victimisation ,Suicide prevention ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Problem Behaviour Theory suggests that young people's problem behaviours tend to cluster. This study examined the relationship between traditional bullying, cyberbullying and engagement in problem behaviours using longitudinal data from approximately 1500 students. Levels of traditional victimisation and perpetration at the beginning of secondary school (grade 8, age 12) predicted levels of engagement in problem behaviours at the end of grade 9 (age 14). Levels of victimisation and perpetration were found to moderate each other's associations with engagement in problem behaviours. Cyberbullying did not represent an independent risk factor over and above levels of traditional victimisation and perpetration for higher levels of engagement in problem behaviours. The findings suggest that to reduce the clustering of cyberbullying behaviours with other problem behaviours, it may be necessary to focus interventions on traditional bullying, specifically direct bullying.
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- 2012
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11. Adolescent bully-victims: Social health and the transition to secondary school
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Therese Shaw, Julian Dooley, Leanne Lester, and Donna Cross
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Harm ,Social connectedness ,Intervention (counseling) ,Transition (fiction) ,education ,Social change ,Social determinants of health ,Peer support ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Education ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the causal pathways and factors associated with being involved in bullying behaviour as a bully-victim using longitudinal data from students aged 11–14 years over the transition time from primary to secondary school. Examination of bully-victim pathways suggest a critical time to intervene is prior to transition from the end of primary school to the beginning of secondary school to prevent and reduce the harm from bullying. Negative outcome expectancies from bullying perpetration were a significant predictor of being a bully-victim at the end of the first year of secondary school. The findings show an association between peer support, connectedness to school, pro-victim attitudes, outcome expectancies and level of bullying involvement. Implications for intervention programs are discussed.
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- 2012
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12. The association between the mental health and behavioural problems of students and their reactions to cyber-victimization
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Julian Dooley, Therese Shaw, and Donna Cross
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Ict skills ,Coping (psychology) ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,social sciences ,Mental health ,humanities ,Social problem-solving ,Developmental psychology ,Skills training ,Prosocial behavior ,Cyber victimization ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Assertiveness ,Psychology ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Cyber-victimization is associated with mental health and behavioural problems and, consequently, young people need effective coping strategies. This study examined the relationship between the aggressive, assertive and passive actions of students after cyber-victimization and their mental health and behavioural problems. In total, 472 students reported being cyber-victimized (primary n = 101, secondary n = 371) and taking action. Student actions did not predict depressive or emotional symptoms. Students who responded aggressively used significantly fewer assertive strategies, had more conduct and hyperactivity problems, more overall difficulties, and fewer prosocial behaviours than students who responded assertively but not aggressively. Primary students reported more emotional symptoms and peer problems than secondary students. This study has important implications for the type (e.g., prosocial ICT skills, assertive skills training) and timing of the support provided to students who are cyber-victimized.
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- 2012
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13. Impact of a mental health promotion program on substance use in young adolescents
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Donna Cross, Yolanda Pintabona, Robert Kane, Stephen R. Zubrick, Sven Silburn, Rachel Williams, and Clare Roberts
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Tobacco use ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Disease cluster ,Mental health ,Young adolescents ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Promotion (rank) ,Optimism ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Substance use ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,media_common - Abstract
This cluster randomized controlled trial evaluated the impact of a universal mental health promotion program, the Aussie Optimism Program (AOP), on adolescent tobacco and alcohol use. Students aged...
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- 2011
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14. Predictors of Bullying among 10 to 11 Year Old School Students in Australia
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Sharyn Burns, Donna Cross, Helman Alfonso, and Bruce Maycock
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Emotional health ,education ,Applied psychology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Psychological intervention ,Peer support ,Pediatrics ,Mental health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Whole school ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Cross-sectional data collected at baseline from the Grade 6 cohort of the Friendly Schools, Friendly Families Project (n = 1,257) were analysed to investigate differences in self-reported attitudes and behaviours of students who reported bullying regularly and occasionally compared with those who reported never bullying others. This study found some similarities and some differences between students who reported bullying regularly and those who reported bullying occasionally, supporting the need to consider both groups when developing school-based bullying interventions. Attitudes to bullying, social and emotional health, peer support and being bullied were predictors of both regular and occasional bullying. The findings of this study support the need for universal bullying prevention interventions targeting the whole school community, including specific selective and indicated strategies, to effect a change in bullying behaviours.
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- 2008
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15. Using Theory to Guide Practice in Children's Pedestrian Safety Education
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Donna Cross, Margaret Hall, and Peter Howat
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Health (social science) ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Applied psychology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Pedestrian ,Program Design Language ,Psychology ,human activities ,Child development ,Occupational safety and health - Abstract
Few pedestrian injury prevention programs appear to articulate the theory upon which their design and evaluation are based. This article describes how theory was used to plan, develop, implement, and evaluate the educational component of a comprehensive child pedestrian intervention. Organizational and planning theories were used to guide the conceptual development, implementation, and evaluation of the program, while behavioral and child development theories were used to identify the content and strategies to address the pedestrian behavior of seven to nine year old children. The resultant program demonstrated improved road crossing and playing behaviors in the intervention group children compared to those in the comparison group. The systematic use of relevant theory in this program is likely to be associated with its positive impact on children's pedestrian safety.
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- 2003
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16. WHO Collaborative Study on Alcohol Education and Young People: Outcomes of a Four-Country Pilot Study
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M. Cecilia Langdon, Ragnar Waahlberg, Debra Blaze-Temple, David R. Jacobs, Annie D. Myeni, Thomas L. Schmid, Stein Berg, Cheryl L. Perry, Gunilla Ernberg, Ramón Florenzano, K. John Fisher, Karl Andersson, Bill Saunders, Donna Cross, and Marcus Grant
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Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Gerontology ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,education ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Alcohol education ,Pilot Projects ,Social Environment ,World Health Organization ,Peer Group ,World health ,Social Facilitation ,Behavior Therapy ,Humans ,Chile ,Health Education ,Social influence ,Drink alcohol ,Norway ,Australia ,Social environment ,Adolescent alcohol ,Mental health ,Alcoholism ,Female ,Psychology ,Eswatini ,Educational program ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
In 1985 the Division of Mental Health, World Health Organization, Geneva, convened a group of investigators from centers in four countries--Australia, Chile, Norway, Swaziland--to participate in a pilot study on the efficacy of school-based alcohol education. The goal of the educational program was to delay onset and minimize involvement of alcohol use among 13- to 14-year-old adolescents. Twenty-five schools in the four countries, representing middle- and lower-class populations, were randomly assigned to peer-led education, teacher-led education, or a control condition. The educational program was derived from social-psychological theory and etiological research on adolescent alcohol use. The program focused on the social and environmental influences to drink alcohol and skills to resist those influences. It consisted of five lessons over 2 months. Baseline and posttest data measured alcohol use knowledge, attitudes, skills, and friends' drinking patterns. Data were collected immediately prior to and 2 months following the educational program. The data converge on the finding that peer-led education appears to be efficacious in reducing alcohol use across a variety of settings and cultures.
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- 1989
- Full Text
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