- Do those students who participated in high school sports and those who did not differ significantly in their attitudes about sexual violence and willingness to intervene as a bystander? Do these differ among types of rape myths and bystander intervention situations?
- Within a group of athletes, are there significant differences by gender or type of sport (contact sport vs. non-contact?)
- Results indicate that there were only minor differences between those students who participated in high school varsity sports and those who did not.
- Students who participated in sports had greater acceptance of three out of five types of rape myths, and less willingness to intervene with perpetrators after an assault; however, the effect sizes were small.
- There were no significant differences for bystander efficacy. The interaction between sport and gender was significant, but contact sport was not.
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By: McMahon S1.
1Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA
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