RT Article T1 School climate predictors of school disorder: results from a national study of delinquency prevention in schools JF Journal of research in crime and delinquency VO 42 IS 4 SP 412 OP 444 A2 Gottfredson, Gary D. 1947- A2 Gottfredson, Denise C. A2 Payne, Allison Ann 1975- A2 Gottfredson, Nisha C. LA English YR 2005 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1639658610 AB Hypotheses about the association of school organizational characteristics with school crime and disorder were tested in a nationally representative sample of 254 secondary schools. Relatively small intra-class correlations suggest that most of the variance in the individual measures of school disorder result from within-school rather than between-school variation. Therefore only a small-portion of this variation is potentially explainable by between-school influences. Nevertheless, school climate explained a substantial percentage of the variance in all measures of school disorder controlling for the effects of community characteristics and school student composition. Schools in which students perceived greater-fairness and clarity of rules had less delinquent behavior and less student victimization. Rule fairness and clarity did not influence teacher victimization. Schools with more positive psychosocial climates had less teacher victimization, but climate did not influence student victimization or delinquent behavior. ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR K1 Gewalt K1 Schule K1 Schulklima K1 Delinquenz K1 Auffälligkeit DO 10.1177/0022427804271931