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Recognizing and enhancing positive peer influence processes. Scott D. Gest Pennsylvania State University October 24, 2011 Forward Thinking: Preparing Youth for the Coming World Youth-Nex Conference, University of Virginia. Peer Relationships. A context in which “problems” occur
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Recognizing and enhancing positive peer influence processes Scott D. Gest Pennsylvania State University October 24, 2011 Forward Thinking: Preparing Youth for the Coming World Youth-Nex Conference, University of Virginia
Peer Relationships • A context in which “problems” occur • Bullying/victimization; delinquency; substance use • A source of negative influence • “peer pressure” OR • A context in which important skills & values develop • Relationship skills, identity, social values • A source of positive support & influence • Emotional support, encouragement for positive aspirations How do we help key adults recognize, support and enhance the latter while acknowledging the possibility of the former?
Some peer influence processes • Direct social interaction • social learning, evaluative feedback, persuasion, resource control • Resource exchange (Thibaut & Kelly, 1959) • Differential roles/status, pressure for conformity • Social comparison (Festinger, 1954) • Peer selection, emergence of shared norms • Influences from outside group (Brewer & Miller, 1996; Brown, 1999) • Stereotypes & differentiation • Structural balance (Heider, 1946) • Formation and dissolution of ties (selection) • Individual status • “impact” (# of ties) vs. “topological” (patterning of ties)
Friendship & Peer Victimization • 5-year longitudinal study of 450 youth across transition to middle school • Support from NSF & Penn State • Key graduate students: Kelly Rulison, Alice Davidson, Lauren Molloy, Deborah Temkin • Patterns of friendship and victimization across first two years of middle school • Fall & Spring of 6th & 7thgrades • Peer-nominated victimization; reports of friendship • Hypothesized dynamics • Having friends prevents victimization • Being friends with a victim puts one at risk for victimization • Victims lose their friends over time
Results • Analyses provided support for all three patterns • Logistic regressions; dynamic network models • Implications • Prevention strategy: promote friendships for all youth • “Treatment” strategy: stop the bullying, then promote victim’s social integration • Challenges for teachers and school personnel • Mediocre at identifying children’s friendships and bullying situations • Little evidence on how to “engineer” friendships • Current research aims to clarify how teachers learn about friendships and bullying/victimization, and how teaching practices may influence both dynamics
Substance Use Prevention & Friendship Networks • PROSPER community-level randomized control trial of evidence-based prevention • Core study funded by NIDA (Spoth & Greenberg) • Additional funding for peer network analysis from NIDA and William T. Grant Foundation (Wayne Osgood, PI; Mark Feinberg, Jim Moody, Derek Kreager) • 11,000 youth in 54 community-cohorts surveyed 5 times from 6th to 9th grades • 6th grade: Family-focused intervention • 7th grade: school-based intervention • How did these prevention programs impact the friendship networks?
Prevention program impact on friendship networks • Many programs target individual behaviors and norms • Reduce appeal of choosing friends who use • Increase resistance to peer influence to use • Potential impact on behavioral norms? “Problem” associated with lesscentral position in network. Norms support positive behavior. “Problem” associated with morecentral position in network. Norms support problem behavior.
Conclusions • Challenges for adults who want to support youths’ positive peer relationships • not very good at recognizing youths’ important peer relationships • mostly improvising in trying to foster friendships in naturalistic settings little evidence on what works • Intervention efforts fall into the familiar trap of framing peer influence as negative • Important directions for research & intervention • Help adults become aware of peer relationship dynamics • Learn from what some adults do successfully • Broaden intervention efforts to recognize, emphasize and enhance positive peer influences