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      Bullies and victims in school: A review and call for research

      Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology
      Elsevier BV

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          The role of overt aggression, relational aggression, and prosocial behavior in the prediction of children's future social adjustment.

          N. Crick (1996)
          2 limitations of past research on social adjustment were addressed: (1) the tendency to focus on forms of aggression that are typical of boys (e.g., overt aggression) and to neglect forms that are more typical of girls (e.g., relational aggression) and (2) the tendency to study negative behaviors (e.g., aggression), to the exclusion of positive behaviors (e.g., prosocial acts). Using a longitudinal design (n = 245; third- through sixth-grade children, 9-12 years old), assessments of children's relational aggression, overt aggression, prosocial behavior, and social adjustment were obtained at 3 points during the academic year. Findings showed that, as has been demonstrated in past research for overt aggression, individual differences in relational aggression were relatively stable over time. Additionally, relational aggression contributed uniquely to the prediction of future social maladjustment, beyond that predicted by overt aggression. Finally, prosocial behavior contributed unique information (beyond that provided by overt and relational aggression) to the prediction of future social adjustment.
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            Is indirect aggression typical of females? gender differences in aggressiveness in 11- to 12-year-old children

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              The emergence of chronic peer victimization in boys' play groups.

              This investigation utilized a contrived play group procedure to examine the behavioral patterns leading to chronic victimization by peers in middle childhood. 30 play groups, each of which consisted of 6 unacquainted African-American 6-year-old or 8-year-old boys, met for 45-min sessions on 5 consecutive days. Play group interactions were videotaped and then examined. 13 boys who came to be chronically victimized by their play group peers were identified, along with matched nonvictim contrasts. Victims demonstrated lower rates of assertive behaviors, such as persuasion attempts and social conversation initiatives, and higher rates of nonassertive behaviors, such as submissions to peers' social initiatives, than contrasts. This nonassertive behavior pattern appears to have preceded the development of chronic victimization. Children who eventually emerged as victims were pervasively submissive, beginning in the initial 2 sessions. However, marked individual differences in victimization by peers did not become apparent until the final 3 sessions. These data provide evidence of strong linkages between submissive social behavior and the emergence of chronic victimization by peers.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology
                Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology
                Elsevier BV
                01933973
                January 1998
                January 1998
                : 19
                : 2
                : 165-176
                Article
                10.1016/S0193-3973(99)80034-3
                c3372f37-11cc-4312-8c85-54d9c45e93c4
                © 1998

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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