Aggressive and Prosocial Peer Norms: Change, Stability, and Associations With Adolescent Aggressive and Prosocial Behavior Development

Publication date

2018-02-01

Authors

Laninga-Wijnen, LydiaORCID 0000-0001-6158-8950ISNI 0000000436351689
Harakeh, ZeenaISNI 0000000390437638
Dijkstra, Jan
Veenstra, René
Vollebergh, WilmaISNI 0000000140464940

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

This longitudinal study examined the extent to which the development of prosocial and aggressive peer norms was related to individual prosocial and aggressive behavior development across the first year of secondary education (three waves, n = 1,134 adolescents from 51 classes, Mage = 12.66). A distinction was made between descriptive norms (the aggregated average peer-perceived behavior within the classroom) and status norms (the within-classroom correlation between peer-perceived popularity and behavior). Results indicated that descriptive norms represented a stable, static peer ecology, whereas status norms were somewhat more dynamic and changed across the school year. The development of descriptive and status norms was associated with initial levels of individual prosocial and aggressive behavior, whereas the development of status norms was also associated with the development of prosocial behavior.

Keywords

aggression, classroom behavior/environment, developmental trajectories, peer conformity, peer popularity, prosocial behavior, Taverne

Citation

Laninga-Wijnen, L, Harakeh, Z, Dijkstra, J K, Veenstra, R & Vollebergh, W 2018, 'Aggressive and Prosocial Peer Norms : Change, Stability, and Associations With Adolescent Aggressive and Prosocial Behavior Development', Journal of Early Adolescence, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 178-203. https://doi.org/10.1177/0272431616665211