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Wayne State Study Explores Long-Term Impact of Bullying on College Success

May 23, 2025
in Social Science
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Dr. Hannah Schacter
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In a groundbreaking initiative supported by the Spencer Foundation, researchers at Wayne State University have embarked on a comprehensive study to investigate the prolonged impacts of bullying and associated mental health challenges on adolescents’ social development and academic trajectories. This study, led by Dr. Hannah L. Schacter, an assistant professor of psychology within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, alongside co-principal investigator Dr. Adam Hoffman from Cornell University, aims to unravel the complex interplay between early peer victimization and later academic persistence in college settings.

The investigation responds to a critical gap in developmental psychology and educational research: while it is well documented that bullying negatively influences mental health and school engagement during middle and high school years, significantly less is known about how these adverse experiences persist into young adulthood and affect students’ ability to sustain academic progress beyond high school. The team hypothesizes that bullying’s deleterious effects transcend immediate psychological distress and manifest in diminished college persistence, a vital marker of educational attainment.

This longitudinal research project benefits from a nearly $50,000 grant through the Spencer Foundation’s Small Research Grants on Education program, which is dedicated to fostering rigorous studies that illuminate educational disparities and barriers. The title of the project, “Understanding the Effects of Peer Victimization and Mental Health in High School on College Persistence,” indicates its focus on mapping the trajectory from high school victimization to college outcomes, emphasizing the mediating role of mental health.

Bullying during adolescence is not merely a transient social challenge but contributes to systemic emotional trauma that impacts cognitive and motivational processes underlying academic engagement. Dr. Schacter elucidates that youth experience reduced classroom participation, lowered academic performance, and a decline in motivation as direct consequences of persistent peer victimization. The study aims to quantify these effects longitudinally, using intensive survey methodologies administered over the participants’ high school tenure.

Initiated in the fall of 2020, the research follows a cohort of ninth-grade students through a structured longitudinal design, collecting data annually to track changes in social experiences, psychological well-being, and academic metrics. This cohort is particularly noteworthy because their entry into high school coincided with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, introducing a unique environmental stressor that could influence social dynamics and learning outcomes in unprecedented ways.

The grant facilitates a critical extension of this research into the college years of the original cohort, enabling the team to trace whether bullying and mental health challenges encountered during adolescence bear lasting legacies on social integration and academic persistence within higher education’s complex milieu. These insights could inform interventions designed to ameliorate the enduring impact of adolescent adversity on educational attainment.

Dr. Schacter expresses an intention to expand the scope of the study by recruiting a larger, post-pandemic cohort of high school students to contrast developmental trajectories. This comparative approach seeks to disentangle the influences of pandemic-related disruptions from those attributable solely to bullying and mental health challenges, thereby refining the understanding of risk and resilience factors affecting youth development.

The study’s interdisciplinary approach weaves together principles from behavioral psychology, clinical psychology, and educational science to model how peer victimization catalyzes psychological stress responses that, in turn, impair academic motivation and persistence. By integrating mental health indicators into academic outcome research, the team addresses a critical need for holistic models that capture the multifaceted nature of adolescent development.

Furthermore, the project’s methodological rigor is complemented by its potential practical applications in shaping school-based policies and postsecondary support programs. Identifying the mechanisms through which bullying exerts long-term effects will enable educators, mental health professionals, and policymakers to devise targeted interventions that help mitigate academic attrition linked to early social trauma.

The broader significance of this research is underscored by current societal concerns regarding adolescent mental health crises and educational disparities exacerbated by the pandemic. Understanding how early adverse experiences translate into educational discontinuities is integral to addressing systemic barriers and promoting equitable academic success among vulnerable populations.

Ezemenari M. Obasi, Ph.D., Wayne State University’s vice president for research and innovation, emphasizes the transformative potential of this study, highlighting its capacity to yield actionable insights that enhance the well-being and academic futures of today’s youth. The collaboration between Wayne State University and Cornell University exemplifies the power of inter-institutional research partnerships in tackling complex social issues.

Wayne State University’s commitment to socially engaged research within an urban setting provides a fertile environment for such studies, fostering multidisciplinary collaboration and community-focused scholarship. By leveraging its institution’s resources and expertise, the research team exemplifies how academic inquiry can directly contribute to improving quality of life and promoting social prosperity.

Ultimately, this research marks a pivotal step forward in understanding the enduring consequences of bullying and mental health difficulties on academic pathways. As the study progresses, it promises to shed light on the nuanced ways adolescent experiences shape educational trajectories, informing evidence-based strategies that support resilience and promote persistence in higher education.


Subject of Research: Long-term effects of bullying and mental health on social development and academic persistence in adolescents

Article Title: [Not provided]

News Publication Date: [Not provided]

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Image Credits: Wayne State University

Keywords: Human social behavior, Emotional abuse, Harassment, Psychological stress

Tags: academic trajectories after bullyingadolescent social development and educationcollege persistence and mental healthdevelopmental psychology and bullying.educational disparities in collegelong-term effects of bullying on college successlongitudinal research on bullyingmental health challenges in adolescentspeer victimization and academic persistencepsychological impact of bullyingSpencer Foundation research grantWayne State University bullying study
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