英文摘要 |
The purpose of this research is to develop a scale for identifying the perpetrators and victims of cyberbullying and cyber aggression on social media sites. The order of the development of the scale is: creating the first prototype, a pretest analysis, and lastly, a formal testing. The main purpose of creating the first prototype is in order to establish expert validity and face validity. The sample size for the pretest analysis was 313 Facebook users. The data collected was used to conduct explorative factor analysis and internal consistency reliability. For the formal testing, the sample size was 6,393 Facebook users, PTT Bulletin Board System users, gamers and Dcard users. The data collected was used to conduct confirmatory factor analysis, retest reliability and to test internal consistency reliability. The results of the research showed that the scale has a good level of reliability and validity. The factor determinants and subscale of ''the identification scale for perpetrators of cyberbullying and cyber aggression'' and ''the identification scale for victims of cyberbullying and cyber aggression'' were all split into language conduct online, conduct of images online and conduct of relationships online. Confirmatory factor analysis showed a favorable goodness-of-fit, convergent validity as well as discriminant validity. The Cronbach's of the identification scale for cyberbullying and cyber aggression perpetrators was .802; the Cronbach's of the differential scale was between .930 and .937. The Cronbach's of the identification scale for cyberbullying and cyber aggression victims was .787; the Cronbach's of the differential scale was between .924 and .948. The retest reliability of ''the identification scale for perpetrators of cyberbullying and cyber aggression'' and ''the identification scale for victims of cyberbullying and cyber aggression'' was higher than .70. Moreover, the results indicated that 1.8% of the participants reported being a cyberbullying victim; 1.0% reported being a cyberbullying perpetrator; 9.2% reported being a cyberaggression victim; and 3.9% reported being a cyberaggression perpetrator. |