Title of article
Impact of Discussion on Peer Evaluations: Perceptions of Low Achievement and Effort
Author/Authors
Todd M. Huenecke & Gregory A. Waas ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
20
From page
64
To page
83
Abstract
The authors placed 5th-grade students into small groups of 3 in order to examine the impact of group discussion and displayed effort on childrenʹs evaluations of a low-achieving peer. Low effort by a target peer resulted in negative evaluations across attributional, affective, help-giving, and social response dimensions. Children who participated in group discussion before making individual evaluations exhibited a polarizing effect in which more extreme evaluations were made than when children did not participate in group discussion. Although all children were affected by both effort level and discussion conditions, gender differences were observed. These findings (a) highlight the importance of addressing the role of the peer group when working with low-achieving children and (b) underscore the impact of effort attributions and low achievement on peer perceptions among elementary-age children.
Keywords
achievement , attribution , child development , individual differences , social context , peers and peer influence , social development
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Record number
708787
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