A study led by Australia’s Victoria University published Monday found that of children who experience violence from their coach, peers or parents in community sport, only 46% told an adult about it.A study led by Australia’s Victoria University published Monday found that of children who experience violence from their coach, peers or parents in community sport, only 46% told an adult about it.
Less than half of Australian children who experience any type of violence in sport disclose the experience to an adult, a world-first study has shown., which was published on Monday in the journal Sport in Society, found that of children who had experienced interpersonal violence from their coach, peers or parent in Australian community sport, only 46% told an adult about it.
Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup The researchers found there were two processes children went through. The first was an internal one as children decided whether to make the disclosure. “They’re weighing up is this bad enough? How is everyone else responding to this? Is this normal?” Woessner said.
The second part was the external process of the child telling the adult. “The majority of participants shared that their disclosures to parents or a coach were often dismissed, disbelieved or diminished with the adult pushing the child to take responsibility for themselves and be ‘resilient’,” the study found.
When it was peer-perpetrated violence, the study found boys had significantly lower rates of disclosure compared with girls .
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