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Same-gender and cross-gender peer acceptance and peer rejection and their relation to bullying and helping among preadolescents: comparing predictions from gender-homophily and goal-framing approaches.

Authors :
Dijkstra JK
Lindenberg S
Veenstra R
Source :
Developmental psychology [Dev Psychol] 2007 Nov; Vol. 43 (6), pp. 1377-1389.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The relation between bullying and helping and same-gender and cross-gender peer acceptance and peer rejection was examined in a sample of preadolescents aged 11 and 12 years (N=1,065). The authors tested predictions from a gender-homophily approach vs. predictions from a goal-framing approach in which acceptance and rejection are seen as being generated by approach and avoidance goals, respectively. For preadolescents, both approaches predicted a central role for gender, but the gender-homophily approach predicted symmetrical effects for acceptance and rejection, whereas the goal-framing approach predicted strong asymmetries. The data supported the goal-framing approach. The most important findings were that for preadolescents, acceptance is much more frequent and much more gendered than rejection; the absolute impact of helping on acceptance is much larger than that of bullying (and vice versa for rejection); for acceptance, there is a prototypicality effect (i.e., boys accept bullying girls better than nonbullying girls, and girls accept helping boys better than nonhelping boys); and for acceptance, there is a cross-gender ignorance effect (i.e., boys ignore helping in girls, and girls ignore bullying in boys).<br /> ((c) 2007 APA.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012-1649
Volume :
43
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Developmental psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18020818
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/0012-1649.43.6.1377