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The
bullying phenomenon is on the rise in schools. Studies show that 10% of
Quebec students are victims of acts of bullying at least once per week.
Is the bullying situation just as disturbing in the rest of the country? Does it affect boys as much as girls? Does it affect younger students as much as older students? Is your class affected by this phenomenon?
In the 2009-2010 Census at School survey, many Canadian students indicated the number of times that they had been victims of bullying at school over the course of the last year.
1.To begin your analysis, obtain a sample of 200 Canadian student responses from the 2009-2010 or earlier surveys. Go to the Census at School site (www.censusatschool.ca) and under "Data and Results", click on "International results and random data selector". Follow the directions to obtain your sample.
Then fill in a frequency table like the one below:
| Group | Number of bullying incidents reported over the course of the last year | ||||
| 0 | 1 to 3 | 4 to 9 | 10 or more | Total | |
| Sample | |||||
2. Convert this frequency table into a relative frequency table. Does the relative frequency table help to illustrate your data? Why?
You can also use a graph to communicate more clearly what appears important to you. Which of two graphs types, the bar or circle graph, would you use in this case? Why?
To better understand the phenomenon and identify the variables that influence it, you can analyse the distribution of responses in the sample of Canadian students based on some of their characteristics.
3. Start by noting the different responses by sex (boy or girl) to assess the effect of this variable.
| Sex | Number of bullying incidents reported over the course of the last year | ||||
| 0 | 1 to 3 | 4 to 9 | 10 or more | Total | |
| Boy | |||||
| Girl | |||||
| Total | |||||
4. Based on this table, try to answer the following questions. Make a relative frequency table or a graph to help you answer them:
5. Then, see whether certain age groups are more affected than others:
| Age | Number of bullying incidents reported over the course of the last year | ||||
| 0 | 1 to 3 | 4 to 9 | 10 or more | Total | |
| 10 | |||||
| 11 | |||||
| 12 | |||||
| . | |||||
| Total | |||||
6. Use a relative frequency table and appropriate graphs to more easily compare the number of acts of bullying suffered by students of each age group.
Could being bullied also be related to the height of students?
Since height dependson both sex and age, we must try to keep these other two variables constant to be able to isolate the effect of the height variable.
7. The ideal method would be to create a new, sufficiently large sample of students of the same age and then analyse responses from girls and boys separately.
Since height is a continuous variable, it is a good idea to define different classes. To keep it simple, you can define three classes based on the data: short, medium and tall. Your frequency table could look like the one below.
| Height | Number of bullying incidents reported for boys 13 years of age | ||||
| 0 | 1 to 3 | 4 to 9 | 10 or more | Total | |
| Short | |||||
| Medium | |||||
| Tall | |||||
| Total | |||||
Once again, use a relative frequency table and a graph to help you compare the data.
What variable(s) seem most related to the bullying phenomenon?
8. Compare yourvarious tables and graphs to identify which variable(s) are most relatedto the bullying phenomenon. Identifying these relationships allows you to consider a model, that is, a simplified representation of the phenomenon and of certain key variables that can describe, explain or even predict it.
9. To validate this model, now examine your class data. Note that students in your class reported the number of times they were bullied at school in the last month.
To conclude:
10. Answer the following questions:
Contributed by France Caron, Université de Montréal and Linda Gattuso, Université du Québec à Montréal.
