This study fills a gap in research on multi-level school-based approaches to
promoting positive youth development and reducing bullying, in
particular cyberbullying, among middle school youth. The study evaluates
the Restorative Practices Intervention, a novel whole-school
intervention designed to build a supportive environment through the use
of 11 restorative practices (e.g., communication approaches that aim to
build stronger bonds among leadership, staff, and students such as using
“I” statements, encouraging students to express their feelings) that
had only quasi-experimental evidence prior to this study.
Studying
multilevel (e.g., individual, peer group, school) approaches like the
Restorative Practices Intervention is important because they are
hypothesized to address a more complex interaction of risk factors than
single level efforts, which are more common.
Baseline and two-year post
survey data was collected from 2771 students at 13 middle schools evenly
split between grades 6 (48 percent) and 7 (52 percent), and primarily
ages 11 (38 percent) or 12 (41 percent). Gender was evenly split (51
percent male), and 92 percent of students were white.
The intervention
did not yield significant changes in the treatment schools. However,
student self-reported experience with restorative practices
significantly predicted improved school climate and connectedness, peer
attachment, and social skills, and reduced cyberbullying victimization.
While more work is needed on how interventions can reliably produce
restorative experiences, this study suggests that the restorative model
can be useful in promoting positive behaviors and addressing bullying.
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