on the activities of a group of boys arid girls who most of the time are unable to succeed in whatever they attempt to do, be it age appropriate play or reading. ## REFERENCES DAVIS, ALLISON. Teaching language and reading to disadvantaged negro children. Elementary Eng-DOLMATCH, T. B. Color me br
Aggressive Behavior and Peer Social Status of Elementary School Children
โ Scribed by Dr. Eric F. Dubow
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 719 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0096-140X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The relation between aggression and peer social status was investigated in a group of 238 third-through f a -g r a d e children. Peer social status refers to the degree to which a child is accepted by his or her peer group. By asking children to nominate peers they "like most" and "like least," one can identify children who are popular, rejected, neglected, or viewed as average within their peer group. Results indicated low to moderate correlations between peer-nominated aggression and global indices of social acceptance. More specifically, it was found that aggressive children largely comprised the rejected and average social status groups, but not the popular or neglected groups. Furthermore, analyses indicated that according to both peers and teachers, aggressive/ rejected children showed academic and social-skill deficits, whereas aggressive children of average peer status exhibited adequate adjustment similar to that of nonaggressivel average-status children. These r d t s suggest the importance of considering peer social status when identifying aggressive children in need of intervention and in determining which skiU deficits to address. In addition, knowledge of an aggressive child's peer status might be useful in enhancing the predictability of adult adjustment.
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