Title of article :
Patterns of Adolescents’ Beliefs About Fighting
and Their Relation to Behavior and Risk
Factors for Aggression
Author/Authors :
Albert D. Farrell، نويسنده , , Amie Bettencourt، نويسنده , , Sally Mays &
Alison Kramer، نويسنده , , Terri Sullivan &Wendy Kliewer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
This study examined adolescents’ patterns of
beliefs about aggression, and how these patterns relate to
aggressive and prosocial behavior, and to risk factors associated
with aggression. A sample of 477 sixth graders from
two urban schools and a school in a nearby county completed
measures of beliefs, behavior, and individual, peer and
parental factors associated with aggression. Teacher ratings
of participants’ behavior and emotion regulation were also
obtained. The urban sample was 84% African American; the
county school was in a rural fringe area with a student
population that was 45% Caucasian and 40% African
American. Latent class analysis of items on a beliefs measure
supported hypotheses predicting three groups: (a) a
Beliefs Against Fighting (BAGF) group that opposed the
use of aggression (31% of the sample); (b) a Fighting is
Sometimes Necessary (FSNEC) group that endorsed beliefs
that fighting is sometimes necessary or inevitable (41%),
and (c) a Beliefs Supporting Fighting (BSUPF) group that
supported aggression across multiple contexts (28%).
Differences across groups were found on race/ethnicity
and family structure, but not on gender. Significant differences
were also found such that the FSNEC group fell
between levels of the BAGF and BSUPF groups on most
measures. In contrast, the FSNEC and BAGF groups both
differed from the BSUPF group, but not from each other on
measures of empathy, perceived effectiveness of nonviolence
and aggression, and parental messages supporting
nonviolence. These differences suggest the need for tailoring
prevention approaches for subgroups of adolescents who
differ in their patterns of beliefs.
Keywords :
Adolescence . Aggression . Violence . Beliefs
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology