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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
July
Negative self-image
of adolescents fosters increasingly damaging behaviors
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
7/26/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Adolescents who think little of themselves tend to shy away from interactions
with peers. This uncertainty and withdrawal then draws negative feedback
from other students, prompting even more withdrawal and leaving them
with few chances to have close friends and as targets for teasing or
bullying.
Such are the findings of a comprehensive yearlong study led by researchers
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and published in the
July/August issue of the journal Child Development. The study looked
closely at three time periods in the lives of 605 fifth and sixth graders
in a Midwest school district, particularly at how the youth and their
peer groups mutually influenced each other.
“Our findings have important implications for understanding how
both youth and their social worlds influence the course of children’s
relationships,” said principal investigator Karen Rudolph, a professor
of psychology at Illinois.
“Unfortunately, youth may enter into self-perpetuating cycles
that result in a downward spiral of relationship difficulties,”
she said. “Intervening in these downward spirals and improving
youths’ relationships will require both helping youth to change
their perceptions of their social abilities and worth, as well as helping
schools to change the peer environments that permit social isolation,
peer conflict and victimization.”
The adolescents participated in three assessments during the study,
each about six months apart. Girls and boys were equally represented,
and 33 percent were from minority groups. The adolescents were asked
about their self-views and experiences of stress in peer relationships.
Teachers were queried about the adolescents’ display of helpless,
withdrawn, and prosocial behaviors with peers.
The researchers focused on how the youths’ beliefs about their
social self-worth and self-efficacy affected their behavior and experiences
in the peer group, and how these experiences then influenced the youths’
future behavior and beliefs.
The results confirmed the researchers expectations about downward social
cycles, suggesting that early intervention is needed to improve peer
interactions in schools, Rudolph said. “Understanding why some
youth experience chronic difficulties in their peer relationships is
critically important for learning how to prevent some of the negative
consequences associated with isolation, rejection, and victimization
by peers.”
The National Institute of Mental Health partially funded the study through
a grant to Rudolph. The study also was supported by a University of
Illinois Research Board Beckman Award and a William T. Grant Foundation
Faculty Scholars Award.
Other researchers participating in the study were Melissa S. Caldwell,
a doctoral student in psychology at Illinois, Wendy Troop-Gordon of
North Dakota State University and Do-Yeong Kim of Macquarie University
in Sydney, Australia.
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