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Effect of Student Vulnerability on Perceptions of Teacher-Student Sexual Involvement

NCJ Number
232053
Journal
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse Volume: 19 Issue: 4 Dated: July/August 2010 Pages: 419-433
Author(s)
Mary Ellen Fromuth; Amber L. Mackey; Amy Wilson
Date Published
July 2010
Length
15 pages
Annotation
This study examined whether the perceived vulnerability of a student would influence perceptions of teacher sexual misconduct.
Abstract
This study explored whether the vulnerability of an adolescent student affected perceptions of teacher sexual misconduct. Respondents (150 male and 150 female undergraduates) read scenarios depicting teacher sexual misconduct varied by respondent gender, gender dyad (male teacher-female student and female teacher-male student), and 3 levels of student vulnerability. The vulnerability of the student was found to have little impact on perceptions. On most variables, interactions emerged between respondent gender and gender dyad. Specifically, male respondents viewed the female teacher-male student dyad less negatively than the male teacher-female student dyad. Female respondents generally did not make distinctions based on gender dyad. Tables, references, and appendix (Published Abstract)