Peer Acceptance Flashcards

1
Q

What is peer acceptance?

A
  • The likelihood that a child is viewed by others as worthy social partner
  • Not friendship
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2
Q

What are the general four categories?

A
  • From research
  1. Popular kids, well-liked by many
  2. Rejected kids, disliked by many
  3. Controversia kids, both positive and negative votes
  4. Neglected kids, seldom mentioned (happy with their friends)

3 + 4
- Display negative and positive behavior with others

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3
Q

What can peer acceptance predict?

A
  • Current and prospective psychological adjustment
  • Rejected childhood; anxiety, unhappiness, low school-performance, dropout, antisocial behavior
  • Reject adolescence; delinquency
  • Rejected adulthood; criminality
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4
Q

Rejected-aggressive children

A
  • Largest subtype
  • Conflicts, often physical
  • Impulsive
  • Display hostile behavior
  • Blame others
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5
Q

Rejected-withdrawn children

A
  • Passive, socially awkward
  • Social Anxiety
  • Negative expectations
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6
Q

Popular-prosocial children

A
  • Combine academic and social competence
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7
Q

Popular-antisocial children

A
  • “Tough guys”, late childhood and early adolescents
  • Athletically skilled but poor grades
  • Cause Trouble
  • Bullies, seen as cool
  • Needs intervention
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8
Q

How can we help rejected children?

A
  • Through interventions
    1- Coaching, modeling, reinforcing positive social skills
    2. Training in and improving perspective taking and problem solving
    3. Combine efforts on several places, social and school
  • Teachers helping to create a positive environment for change
  • Need to start early
  • Important to focus on parent-child relationship as well
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9
Q

Peer groups

A
  • A group that shares unique values, standards for behaviour and social structure involving leaders and followers, exclusion exists
  • Having peer culture
  • End of middle school
    -Barely changes the first few weeks, more changes after a year
  • Often based of proximity
  • Opportunities to practice co-operations, leadership and followship + loyalty toward goals
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10
Q

Peer Cliques

A
  • Emerges in early adolescence
  • Group of friends with similiar beliefs, values and interests
  • 5-8 members
  • Same sex younger, mixed older
  • Among girls, linked with academic and social competence
  • Often important for girls
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11
Q

Peer Crowds

A
  • Several distinct cliques with similar values and beliefs
  • Membership based on stereotype and reputation
    The jocks, the nerds, normies
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12
Q

Conformity and Peer pressure

A
  • Greater during adolescents
    Dont blindly follow
  • Peer conformity is complex
    Age, situation, social approval, culture
  • Most common are clothes, grooming and social activities
  • Resistances strenghtens with age
    Differences exists
    Personality
    Parenting
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