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      The Best Friendships of Shy/Withdrawn Children: Prevalence, Stability, and Relationship Quality

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          Most cited references30

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          Measuring Friendship Quality During Pre- and Early Adolescence: The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Friendship Qualities Scale

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            Co-Rumination in the Friendships of Girls and Boys

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              Having friends, keeping friends, making friends, and being liked by peers in the classroom: predictors of children's early school adjustment?

              G W Ladd (1990)
              The potential role that children's classroom peer relations play in their school adjustment was investigated during the first 2 months of kindergarten and the remainder of the school year. Measures of 125 children's classroom peer relationships were obtained on 3 occasions: at school entrance, after 2 months of school, and at the end of the school year. Measures of school adjustment, including children's school perceptions, anxiety, avoidance, and performance, were obtained during the second and third assessment occasions. After controlling mental age, sex, and preschool experience, measures of children's classroom peer relationships were used to forecast later school adjustment. Results indicated that children with a larger number of classroom friends during school entrance developed more favorable school perceptions by the second month, and those who maintained these relationships liked school better as the year progressed. Making new friends in the classroom was associated with gains in school performance, and early peer rejection forecasted less favorable school perceptions, higher levels of school avoidance, and lower performance levels over the school year.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
                J Abnorm Child Psychol
                Springer Nature
                0091-0627
                1573-2835
                April 2006
                February 2006
                : 34
                : 2
                : 139-153
                Article
                10.1007/s10802-005-9017-4
                16485175
                afce755c-5809-455f-ac0d-0f6dbe93b43f
                © 2006
                History

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