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Mediating effects of social-cognitive errors and skills for children experiencing peer relational, physical and ethnic victimizationHoglund, Wendy Lorraine. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Children's and adolescents' reports of reactions to interpersonal conflicts in dyads versus groupsSinclair, Nancy L. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Children's and adolescents' reports of reactions to interpersonal conflicts in dyads versus groups / Peer reports of reactionsSinclair, Nancy L. January 2006 (has links)
The primary focus of this study was to assess children's and adolescents' perceptions of the ways in which peers respond to stressful conflicts that occur amongst them. Key variables that were examined were the social context (a dyad relationship versus a group relationship) and the social atmosphere (a compatible relationship versus an incompatible relationship) in which the conflict occurred. Scenarios were developed to simulate, as close as possible, realistic stressful conflicts that might typically arise in the daily lives of school age children and adolescents. Children and adolescents across three grade levels (1, 5, and 10) were administered a peer report measure in which they indicated to what extent they believed their same-sex peers would respond aggressively. The first part of the procedure required participants to listen to either a social scenario (someone who had been a member of a club was asked to leave) or an academic scenario (someone was given a bad grade by a peer) that described a conflict between two protagonists. The results of this study revealed that, as predicted, females endorsed significantly more aggressive responses for the compatible dyad context compared to the compatible group, incompatible dyad and incompatible group contexts. This finding occurred for overt, covert and withdrawn forms of aggression. These findings were also consistent across the three grade levels. Contrary to the hypothesis, males did not believe that their peers would behave differently across social contexts or atmospheres. Males did however report a higher level of overt and withdrawn aggression than females when the dyad and group conditions were combined. There were no gender differences in the aggressive responses for covert aggression. The implications of females' beliefs that degree of aggression would be highest in the intimate compatible dyad relationship compared to the other relationship contexts were discussed.
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The impact of social status on preschoolers' display of direct and ritualized re[s]ponses to peer conflict /Nickoletti, Patrick. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Psychology Department, Committee on Human Development, March 2000. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Conflict resolution strategies in young children do they do what they say? /Leventhal, Julie Erin. Glover, Rebecca June, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of North Texas, Dec., 2007. / Title from title page display. Includes bibliographical references.
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Attachment styles and aggressor-victim relationships in preadolescenceUnknown Date (has links)
The current study investigated the change in relationship between an aggressor's attachment style (avoidant or preoccupied) and a series of characteristics in their victims' over a school year. Once a semester, participants rated themselves and their classmates on 16 personality characteristics and their aggression levels against other students. Only avoidant girls significantly refined their targets over the course of a school year. They increased their aggression towards girls with low appearance self-efficacy, a high avoidance attachment, high depression, high cross-gender typed behavior, high internalizing behavior, and low global self-worth. / by Ashley M. Miller. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2012. / Includes bibliography. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / System requirements: Adobe Reader.
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The retrospective impact of relational victimization and attachment quality on the psychological and social functioning of college studentsGoodwin, Jamie L. 28 June 2011 (has links)
Although growing evidence suggests that relational victimization is harmful to children as it occurs and shortly after, less is known about the potential long-term effects. The present study develops and validates a retrospective measure of childhood relational victimization experiences. A model is
tested of the relations between childhood relational victimization experiences and early parental attachment quality on early adult psychological and social adjustment factors such as peer attachment quality, loneliness, and social anxiety, as mediated by rejection sensitivity. It has been proposed that
early parental attachment quality, mediated by rejection sensitivity, may largely impact adult functioning (Downey, Khouri, & Feldman, 1997), but childhood relational victimization may also affect this psychosocial functioning. The Retrospective Relational Victimization Questionnaire (RRVQ) was developed and validated for this study to measure past relational victimization experiences. The primary
study used structural equation modeling to assess a primary model of how both childhood parental
attachment quality and relational victimization contribute to the experience of rejection sensitivity and in turn affects early adult functioning. A comparison is made with an alternative model which included
only early parental attachment as a predictor of early adult adjustment. The RRVQ was found to be a
reliable and valid measure of college students’ retrospectively recalled childhood relational
victimization experiences. Neither the primary nor the alternative model was found to be well-fitting; however, additional exploratory results suggest that both early parental attachment and relational victimization experiences are significantly associated with current rejection sensitivity, while early relational victimization is somewhat more associated with current adult peer attachment, loneliness, and social anxiety than is early parental attachment. Educational, clinical, and research implications are
discussed. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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Social context regulates internalizing versus externalizing responses in children and adolescents during interpersonal conflictDolenszky, Eva January 2003 (has links)
The current study examined the hypothesis that in the presence of a stressor, the social context (dyad relationship versus a group relationship) can influence whether children and adolescents display internalizing as opposed to externalizing emotions and behaviors. Specifically, it was hypothesized that more internalizing relative to externalizing behaviors would be reported to occur in a dyad than a group. Three hundred and eighty-six children and adolescents (176 females and 210 males) from three grade levels (1,5, and 10) participated in the study. A measure was developed to simulate, as closely as possible, two realistic stressful events that might typically arise in the daily lives of school age children and adolescents. Participants were asked to rate how other children their age and gender would respond in these situations, with the intention of tapping into children and adolescents' knowledge of the occurrence of internalizing versus externalizing responses. The findings partially supported the hypothesis that the social context regulates expectations for emotional and behavioral responses to the same stressor in children and adolescents. Following a conflict, both female and male participants reported expecting higher rates of internalizing relative to externalizing emotions and behaviors for the target individuals in the dyadic versus group context.
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Social context regulates internalizing versus externalizing responses in children and adolescents during interpersonal conflictDolenszky, Eva. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.). / Written for the Dept. of Educational and Counselling Psychology. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2008/07/28). Includes bibliographical references.
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Social context regulates internalizing versus externalizing responses in children and adolescents during interpersonal conflictDolenszky, Eva January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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