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Psychology 3260: Personality & Social Development

Psychology 3260: Personality & Social Development. Don Hartmann Spring 2006 Lecture 10: Peers I. Administration.

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Psychology 3260: Personality & Social Development

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  1. Psychology 3260: Personality & Social Development Don Hartmann Spring 2006 Lecture 10: Peers I

  2. Administration The library has a Writing Center (in conjunction with the Writing Program) on Level 3 “to help students at all levels become better writers.” (Phone # 587-9122 or just drop by the 3rd floor of Marriott in the Atrium area). Ben is your man. If your group elected to write autobiographical papers, but a minority would like to present to the class, they are welcome to recruit from other groups. Please let me know who you are. • Reed Dow • Salem Honey Quote of the Day: "Be who you are and say how you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind"----Dr. Seuss

  3. WEB Discussion Topic #10 I. J. Skinner & the classroom. Bono. Summary due Thursday, February 16th. Assume that you are a elementary school teacher. You are intrigued with Skinner’s theory, and are attempting to integrate his theory into your teaching practices. What implications can you come up with from what you have learned about his theory? Which of his principles are implicated in the potential applications you have noted?

  4. WEB Discussion Topic #11 I.K. Bronfenbrenner & Skinner. Girlie. Summary due Friday, February 17th. While both Skinner and Bronfenbrenner (who recently died) focus on the environment’s “control” over behavior, neither one would be comfortable being described as a follower of the other. How do their theories differ? How do their conceptions of the environment differ? As always, feel free to reply to the comments of others.

  5. WEB Discussion Assignments & Due Dates WEB Assignment # Group I II III IV CSI 02/03 Growing Pain 02/06 Psyched 02/07 Agrrrression 02/08 Authoritarians02/09 Divas 02/10 Peer Pressure 02/13 Morally Distinguished 02/14 Raging Hormones 02/15 Bono 02/16 Girlie 02/19 Note: Each discussion topic closes at 5:00 p.m. two days prior to the stated due data.

  6. Panel Discussion Schedule Wednesday… Feb. 15th Feb. 22nd Identity (Murquia et al.) Feb. 29th Mar. 08th Mar. 15th Bullying (Borski et al.) Mar. 29th Apr. 05nd: Family topic (Kyle et al.) Apr. 12th Apr. 19th Get you time period now, they are going like hot cakes!

  7. Handout* WEB Date Date 11. Sup. Lect. #3: Method III ----- 01/11 12. HO: Autobio. Term Paper ----- 01/11 13. Lecture #4a: Method III ----- 01/12 14. HO: Completed Class Locator 01/13 ----- 15. Sup. Lect: Term Paper ----- 01/13 16. Code of Academic Conduct ----- 01/18 17. Study Guide #2: Chpt. 2 ----- 01/18 18. Lect. #7: Skinner ----- 01/18 19. Lect. #8: Bandura ----- 01/19 20. Study Guide #3 ----- 01/24 21. Lect. #9: Piaget ----- 01/25 22. Lect. 10: Peers I ----- 01/27 23. Study Guide #4 ----- 01/30 ----- *Handout date refers to the date the handout was distributed in class. WEB date indicates the date the handout should have been included on the class WEB site. A dashed line indicates that the handout either was not distributed in class or was not placed on the WEB. Handout Summary

  8. Study Guide Assistance from the Instructor • Based upon past experience, a number of you will wait until the night before the exam to prepare answers to the study guides. You should know the rules relating to requests to the instructor for help on the study guides: • I do not take class material home with me, so I am unlikely to be able to answer questions after 5:00 p.m. on the evening prior to the exam—or any other evening. • You are to use the instructor as a last resort after consulting with class mates about study guide answers. • The instructor will not answer more than 3 study guide questions per request and you are limited to 1 request per day.

  9. Supplementary References: Peers I Rubin, K.H., Coplan, R.J., Chen, X., Buskirk, A.A., Wojslawowicz, J.C. (2005). Peer relations in childhood. In M.H. Bornstein & M.E. Lamb (Eds.) Developmental science: An advanced textbook (5th ed.). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Rubin, K. H., Bukowski, W., & Parker, J. G. (1998). Peer interactions, relationships, and groups. In W. Damon (Series Ed.) N. Eisenberg (Vol. Ed.), Handbook of child psychology, Vol. 3: Social, emotional, and personality development (5th ed., pp. 619-700). New York: Wiley.

  10. Overview of Peer Relations I Lecture • Overlap with text, pp. 421-424 & 434-437 • Lecture • Who Are Peers? • Why Study Peers? • Historical Perspective • Scientific Investigations of the Peer Group: Early Period • Next: Lecture 11: Peers II

  11. Peers: Who are they? • In age-graded society, children within a year of age of one another; individuals of a similar level of behavioral complexity • However, wider age variation true of neighborhood social groups

  12. Parental vs. Peer Relationships • Parents Peers • Hierarchical Equalitarian • Nurturance Competition • Dependency Reciprocity

  13. Ellis et al.: Neighborhood Companions

  14. What do children do with their peers? High Tech Method • Hi tech (Csikszentmihalyi & Larsen): Experience time sampling

  15. What do children do with their peers? Low Tech Method • Diaries (Zarbatany et al. & Hartmann et al.) • 10-14%: Hanging out, Team sports, & Classroom activities • 5-9%: Recreational activities, individual sports, study/rehearsal, & eating

  16. Who Cares? And Why? • Increasing evidence that peers are critical to our eventual adult functioning • Animal studies: Harlow's studies of peer deprived monkeys) • Longitudinal studies of children who have faulty peer relations, particularly those who are either aggressive or rejected (Parker & Asher, 1987 Psychological Bulletin review), indicates that these children are at risk for later problems. • Important for development of social control, social skills, and social values.

  17. The Declining Influence of Parents?

  18. SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS OF THE PEER GROUP The early period • Early observational work (Ruth Arrington at Yale); early studies of gangs • Work of Kurt Lewin • Moreno's work on sociometric techniques.

  19. Sociometric Classifications Negative Nominations Many Few Controversial Popular Positive Nominations Few Many Rejected Neglected

  20. Assessing Popularity • Referred to as Sociometric Status (SMS) • Started with Moreno (of Psychodrama fame) • Participants asked two questions (nominations or ratings): • Who do you like? • Who do you dislike? • Then construct two dimensions • Like + Dislike = Social Impact • Like – Dislike = Social Preference • Individuals assigned to classification categories based upon their Social Impact and Social Preference scores

  21. Is the child liked? Controversial Rejected Popular Average Average Social Impact Neglected High Low Social Preference

  22. The Results • Of the 60% who are classifiable (40% are “other”) • 15% average • 7.5% controversial • 7.5% neglected • 15% popular • 15 rejected. • Peer-based classification agree with teacher ratings • Accurately predict the character of children’s peer interactions • Stability: Controversial least stable; rejected most stable.

  23. What are they like? Large number of observational, peer report, and self-report studies on children’s SMS • Rejected kids: • Rejected-aggressive: uncooperative, critical; little prosocial behavior. At greatest risk for future problems • Rejected-withdrawn: awkward, insensitive, and immature. Lonely with low self esteem • Popular: outgoing, friendly, supportive, and calm. Initiate interactions and resolve disputes amicably. Prosocial and not aggressive • Neglected: passive and shy. Don’t initiate and don’t call attention to self • Controversial: the jokesters; some evidence that controversial adolescent girls are more likely to have kids early

  24. Summary of Social Cognition Lecture • Lecture • Who Are Peers? • Why Study Peers? • Historical Perspective • Scientific Investigations of the Peer Group: Early Period • Next: Lecture #11: Peers II • Go in Peace

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