Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11023977 | Teaching and Teacher Education | 2019 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Students report that teachers often do not intervene against homophobic language. Among 283 teachers in 16 Norwegian schools, several factors distinguished which teachers reported more consistently intervening and more frequently discussing homophobic language with students. Women, but not men, who more strongly believed that homophobic language should not be allowed and who believed it was harmful reported more consistent intervention. Women and men who reported greater self-efficacy to intervene reported more consistent intervention. In a second model, teachers who reported receiving education on homophobic bullying and who reported greater self-efficacy to intervene more frequently discussed homophobic language with students.
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Authors
V. Paul Poteat, Hilde Slaatten, Kyrre Breivik,