Title of article
Effects of Pairing Aggressive and Nonaggressive Children in Strategic Peer Affiliation
Author/Authors
Joel M. Hektner، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
14
From page
399
To page
412
Abstract
Examined the behavior of 118 second graders who participated in a 6-week summer school program
that incorporated strategic peer affiliation (a “buddy system”). Moderately aggressive children (the
targets of the intervention) were paired with nonaggressive peers throughout the program. All participants
were observed playing foosball with their buddies and with aggressive and nonaggressive
nonbuddies as teammates. Aggressive children had lower levels of disruptive behavior when their
teammate was nonaggressive, regardless of whether the teammate was a buddy. Nonaggressive children
showed elevated disruptive behavior when playing with an aggressive nonbuddy, but not when
playing with an aggressive buddy. The highest level of aggressive behaviorwas seen in pairs of aggressive
teammates who were friends. One year later, no increase in peer-rated aggressive behavior was
found in either group. Results suggest that unidirectional peer influence is possible and that strategic
peer affiliation can be an effective intervention that does not put nonaggressive children at risk for
acquiring undesired behaviors.
Keywords
peer mentoring , Peer influence , Intervention , Aggression
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828701
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