Peer Relationships in Childhood
Kenneth H. Rubin,Julie C. Bowker,Kristina L. McDonald,Melissa M. Menzer +3 more
- 14 Mar 2013
- pp 317-368
313
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that adjustment and maladjustment in childhood stem from a wide variety of sources including genetic and biological underpinnings and social influences other than parents, such as siblings, teachers or out-of-home caregivers, and peers.
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Abstract: An early view of the development of adaptive and maladaptive behaviors during childhood
and adolescence suggested that such outcomes stemmed largely from the quality of the child’s
relationship with his or her parents and from the types of socialization practices that the
parents engaged in. This primary focus on the developmental significance of the parent-child
relationship and of parenting practices was proposed early by Freud (1933) in his theory of
psychosexual development, by Sears, Maccoby, and Levin (1957) in their seminal research on
the significance of discipline variability and social learning, and by Bowlby (1958) in his
influential writings on the long-term developmental importance of the mother-infant
attachment relationship. Without denying the veracity of these claims, it is nevertheless the
case that adjustment and maladjustment in childhood stem from a wide variety of sources
including genetic and biological underpinnings and social influences other than parents. For
example, children and adolescents spend enormous amounts of time, both in and out of
home, relating to and interacting with many other people of potential influence. These significant others include their siblings, teachers or out-of-home caregivers, and peers. Children’s
peers are the focus of the present chapter.
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A Two-Month Field Trial in an Elementary School for Long-Term Human–Robot Interaction
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References
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TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper found that sociability-leadership positively predicted indexes of social and school adjustment, including peer acceptance, teachers' perceptions of schoolrelated competence, leadership, academic achievement, adjustment problems, and self-perceptions of competence.
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Difficult temperament and behaviour problems : A Longitudinal study from 1.5 to 12 years
TL;DR: A 10-year longitudinal study on the developmental-behavioural significance of infant temperamental difficultness is presented in this article, where a cross-time, cross-context methodology was employed using data from over 100 children participating in the Fullerton Longitudinal Study.
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Age and Sex Differences in Dyadic and Group Interaction.
TL;DR: Results showed that boys and girls at both ages engaged in similar frequencies but different patterns of dyadic interaction, and only 6-year-old boys, however, interacted in groups.
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Peer Crowd Affiliation and Internalizing Distress in Childhood and Adolescence: A Longitudinal Follow-Back Study
TL;DR: For instance, this article found that adolescents' report of peer crowd affiliation was concurrently associated with self-concept and levels of internalizing distress, and that Populars/Jocks had experienced significant declines in internalizing depression across development, whereas Brains exhibited some increases in internalising distress between childhood and adolescence.
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TL;DR: The results suggest that the selection of raters should be influenced by the class of behaviors to be evaluated and the context in which they occur, and that aggression produced greatest agreement between raters.
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