Deviant of diverse peer groups? The peer affiliations of aggressive elementary students. |
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Authors: | Farmer, Thomas W. Leung, Man-Chi Pearl, Ruth Rodkin, Philip C. Cadwallader, Thomas W. Van Acker, Richard |
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Abstract: | This study examined peer affiliations of aggressive children in a sample of 948 students (496 girls, 452 boys) from 59 elementary classrooms (4th-6th grades). Groups were identified as zero aggressive, nonaggressive, aggressive, and mixed. The deviant peer group hypothesis was partially supported. Two thirds of aggressive boys and one half of aggressive girls were members of nonaggressive or mixed peer groups. Unpopular aggressive boys were most likely to be members of nonaggressive groups, whereas popular aggressive boys were most likely to be in aggressive and mixed groups. Aggressive and nonaggressive associates tended to he similar on key social characteristics (i.e., popularity, athleticism, leadership). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | social characteristics elementary classrooms nonaggressive groups aggressive groups aggressive children elementary students gender mixed groups peer groups |
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