Correlation Between Peer Bullying and Aggressive Behavior Exposure of Deaf Children
Description
Hearing-impaired individuals have difficulty in their daily lives in many ways compared to individuals who do not have a hearing disability this condition also occurs most frequently in hearing-impaired children at the school age in their lives. hearing-impaired adults also have difficulty in their daily lives in many ways compared to individuals who do not have a hearing disability. Some of the challenges that hearing-impaired students confront throughout their school years include a lack of accessible resources and a lack of opportunities for hearing impaired students to get customized test preparation. It has been shown that bullying by peers is the most prevalent challenge that is experienced by hearing-impaired youngsters while they are attending school. A kid with a disability who is bullied by their peers may become withdrawn, feel ostracized, and maybe even experience rage as a consequence of the bullying. Because he feels rage, he is able to target his violent conduct onto a person he perceives as being weak. This allows him to get his anger out. A hearing-impaired person who is subjected to bullying by peers has an increased risk of engaging in criminal action and displaying violent behavior leads. Theft, harm, and damage to public property are examples of crimes that may be committed by people with disabilities. It is possible that hearing-impaired youngsters who are bullied by their peers would develop a pattern of violent conduct as adults as a result of the traumatic experiences they had as children.
Files
Correlation Between Peer Bullying and Aggressive Behavior Exposure of Deaf Children.pdf
Files
(349.8 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:a8ff058cf320bad0f4441b93887b65c7
|
349.8 kB | Preview Download |