4.5 Article

The Role of Aggressive Peer Norms in Elementary School Children's Perceptions of Classroom Peer Climate and School Adjustment

Journal

JOURNAL OF YOUTH AND ADOLESCENCE
Volume 50, Issue 8, Pages 1582-1600

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10964-021-01432-0

Keywords

Aggressive peer norms; Classroom climate; School adjustment; Popularity; Victimization

Funding

  1. NWO-PROO grant [411-10-915]

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The study found that aggressive descriptive norms and popularity norms both have an impact on students' classroom climate perceptions and adjustment in elementary education, but in different ways. Aggressive descriptive norms contribute to negative classroom climate perceptions regardless of students' social position, while aggressive popularity norms are related to school maladjustment for popular and victimized children.
Although prior research has indicated that peer norms for aggression enhance the spread of aggression in classrooms, it is unclear to date how these norms relate to students' classroom climate perceptions and school adjustment. Aggressive descriptive norms reflect the average aggression of all students in classrooms, whereas aggressive popularity norms represent the extent to which aggressive behavior relates to popularity among peers. This study examined the role of aggressive descriptive and popularity norms in the classroom climate perceptions (cooperation, conflict, cohesion, isolation) and school adjustment (feelings of belonging; social, academic, and general self-esteem) of popular, well-liked, and victimized children. Self-reported and peer-nominated data were obtained from 1511 children (M-age = 10.60 years, SD = 0.50; 47.2% girls) from 58 fifth-grade classrooms. The results indicated that aggressive descriptive and popularity norms both matter in elementary school, but in diverging ways. Specifically, aggressive descriptive norms-rather than popularity norms-contributed to negative classroom climate perceptions irrespective of students' social position. In addition, whereas descriptive norms contributed to between-classroom variations in some aspects of school adjustment, aggressive popularity norms related to increased school maladjustment for popular and victimized children specifically. Thus, aggressive descriptive norms and popularity norms matter in complementary ways for children's classroom climate perceptions and adjustment in elementary education.

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