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Showing 1 to 15 of 95 results Save | Export
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Pietro A. Sasso; Brian Joyce; Stevan J. Veldkamp – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
The Piazza Center Horizontal Hazing Model conceptualizes the ways in which hazing transitions from pre-college environments into higher education and across student constructed spaces such as student organizations or sorority and fraternity chapters. Hazing is multi-tiered, occurring at individual, organizational, and community levels. This model…
Descriptors: Hazing, Models, Student Organizations, Sororities
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J. Patrick Biddix; Jason R. Kilmer; Rob Turrisi – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
Hazing is a form of violence that can have short- and long-term physical, emotional, and psychological impacts on individuals and communities. This article reviews existing approaches for addressing public health challenges adjacent to hazing such as school violence, bullying, and sexual violence. Employing evidence-based strategies that are…
Descriptors: Hazing, Prevention, School Violence, Bullying
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Adam M. McCready; J. Patrick Biddix; Emily Feuer; B. Elliot Hopkins – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
While often positioned as a higher education challenge, hazing is prevalent in the secondary environment and is often linked to college hazing victimization and perpetration. This article reviews foundational studies of secondary education hazing, peer violence, and bullying, as these related activities are frequently linked in secondary education…
Descriptors: Hazing, Secondary School Students, Victims, Peer Relationship
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J. Patrick Biddix; Emily Perlow; Hailey Flavin; Akeya Simeon – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
Hazing is a longstanding tradition within student groups at American middle schools, high schools, and colleges. The pursuit of acceptance leads young adults to endure physical, mental, or emotional abuse through tolerated behaviors. In this article, we define hazing in the context of the secondary and college setting, exploring some of the…
Descriptors: Hazing, Prevention, Middle School Students, High School Students
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Nicholas M. Perez; Aldo Cimino – Journal of School Violence, 2024
Student hazing activities on American college campuses have resulted in numerous deaths reported in the news media. Despite regular reports on hazing-related fatalities, no research has examined how these deaths are reported. The current study aims to bridge this research gap by analyzing articles covering hazing deaths in the U.S. between 1994…
Descriptors: News Media, Trend Analysis, Hazing, Death
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Brian Joyce; Jason L. Meriwether; Emily Perlow – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
Hazing is motivated by numerous psychosocial phenomena embedded in the broader cultural milieu. The identification and deconstruction of these motivators presents an especially unique pathway to eliminating harmful and dangerous behaviors. The application of situational strength to hazing prevention offers a robust and applicable framework to help…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Motivation, Hazing, Student Behavior
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Kathleen E. Gillon; Elizabeth J. Allan; Cameron C. Beatty; Cristobal Salinas; David J. Kerschner – Innovative Higher Education, 2025
Hazing, a type of abusive behavior that can harm students and undermine university missions, has implications that extend beyond those individuals, groups, and communities directly involved. Our investigation drew on critical whiteness studies (CWS) to explore intersections of hazing and white supremacy. Campus hazing climate interviews (n = 345)…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Hazing, Racism, White Students
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Stevan J. Veldkamp; Jenny Walker; William Cangialosi; Benjamin Batey – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
Hazing is a growing concern in US middle schools, high schools, and colleges. As more is understood about the complex phenomenon, so are strategies to prevent its occurrence and the cultures supporting it. This article reviews and critiques prevention strategies in four case studies set in high school, college, and student organization settings. A…
Descriptors: Hazing, Intervention, Prevention, Middle School Students
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Cimino, Aldo – Journal of College and Character, 2023
Some collegiate anti-hazing programs are employing anti-hazing messaging that consists of exaggerated, misleading, or dubious claims. These claims are typically phrased in a way that is either a poor representation of the overall state of the research literature on hazing or oversells the findings from a single study. The failure to prioritize…
Descriptors: Hazing, Communication Strategies, Misinformation, College Students
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Thomas H. Sawyer; Tonya L. Sawyer – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
Teaching physical education involves more than overseeing what happens on the field, court or in the swimming pool. Physical educators also need to control the locker room, where students hazing other students may be common practice at certain schools. This case is a good example of what happens when teachers and coaches fail to supervise athletes…
Descriptors: Supervision, Hazing, Athletic Coaches, Athletes
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Kimberly Rogers Davis; Akeya Simeon; Emily Anne Pride Sutton – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
As institutions implement more comprehensive hazing prevention efforts, assessment is a necessary strategy for ensuring that programs and services for students are achieving their intended outcomes, especially as hazing behaviors change and evolve. Using a multi-stage student learning and development outcomes cycle, this article outlines steps to…
Descriptors: Hazing, Prevention, Intervention, Program Evaluation
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Pietro A. Sasso; Susan Bruce; Lori Hart; Kayle J. Davis – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
Hazing prevention and education efforts continue to evolve in response to changing student behavior. The organic and anomic nature of hazing is deeply embedded in higher education, permeating across campus reinforced by cultural norms and institutional practices. While numerous approaches attempt to disrupt hazing, public health approaches,…
Descriptors: Prevention, Hazing, Student Behavior, Higher Education
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Elizabeth J. Allan; Kimberly Stewart; David Kerschner – Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 2025
This investigation explored the concept and practice of organizational commitment to hazing prevention in higher education. Using Bolman and Deal's four frames we analyzed qualitative data from written materials and interviews with 16 campus professionals at eight U.S. universities. Findings revealed structural, human resource, political, and…
Descriptors: College Role, Hazing, Prevention, College Administration
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Timothy C. Marchell; Laura Beth Santacrose; Anne C. Laurita; Elizabeth J. Allan – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: The present report describes a comprehensive, public health approach to hazing prevention on a university campus and evaluates its impact over time. Participants: Two different surveys (PULSE and MASCOT) were administered to college undergraduate students, in April 2013 (PULSE n = 6,190; MASCOT n = 3,117) and March 2015 (PULSE n =…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Hazing, Prevention, Student Experience
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Robin M. Kowalski; Mackenzie Foster; Molly Scarborough; Leah Bourque; Stephen Wells; Riley Graham; Hailey Bednar; Madeleine Franchi; Sarah Nash; Kelsey Crawford – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2021
Using the Olweus' (1993, 2013) model of bullying as a framework, hazing and bullying were compared along the dimensions of aggression, intent to cause harm or distress, power imbalance, and repetition. The relationship of the two behaviors to moral disengagement was also examined. One hundred ninety-nine workers on Amazon's Mechanical Turk…
Descriptors: Bullying, Hazing, Aggression, Moral Issues
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