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Children's normative beliefs about aggression and aggressive behavior

TLDR
The authors found that children tended to approve more of aggression as they grew older and that this increase appeared to be correlated with increases in aggressive behavior.
Abstract
Normative beliefs have been defined as self-regulating beliefs about the appropriateness of social behaviors. In 2 studies the authors revised their scale for assessing normative beliefs about aggression, found that it is reliable and valid for use with elementary school children, and investigated the longitudinal relation between normative beliefs about aggression and aggressive behavior in a large sample of elementary school children living in poor urban neighborhoods. Using data obtained in 2 waves of observations 1 year apart, the authors found that children tended to approve more of aggression as they grew older and that this increase appeared to be correlated with increases in aggressive behavior. More important, although individual differences in aggressive behavior predicted subsequent differences in normative beliefs in younger children, individual differences in aggressive behavior were predicted by preceding differences in normative beliefs in older children.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Too Calloused to Care: An Experimental Examination of Factors Influencing Youths' Displaced Aggression Against Their Peers

TL;DR: Investigating how situational factors (provocateur availability, provocation intensity) and dispositional factors (callousness, trait aggressiveness) jointly influence displaced and direct aggression in male adolescents found displaced aggression occurred only when the negative feedback was strong.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Self in Action: An Emerging Link Between Self-Beliefs and Behaviors in Middle Childhood

TL;DR: This article found that children become more likely to use knowledge about their own self to actively evaluate and reflect on their thoughts and behavior around age 8, which has implications for understanding the importance of potential age-related cognitive changes in the understanding of the self; it also has methodological implications regarding the appropriate age to collect self-evaluative data on young children.
Journal ArticleDOI

School-Wide Bullying Prevention Program for Elementary Students

TL;DR: The No Bullying Allowed Here (NBAL) program as mentioned in this paper is a school-wide program for elementary schools that covers characteristics of bullies and victims, responding techniques, problem solving, perspective taking, and empathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preschoolers use trait-relevant information to evaluate the appropriateness of an aggressive response

TL;DR: It is suggested that, as early as preschool, trait-relevant information about other people can serve as a tool with which children evaluate the appropriateness of aggression in response to ambiguous behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Beliefs About the Importance of Social Skills in Elementary Children’s Social Behaviors and School Attitudes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the hypothesis that children's beliefs about the importance of social skills contribute to school attitudes through their effect on social behavior (i.e., social skills and aggression).
References
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Book

Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A Social Cognitive Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, models of Human Nature and Casualty are used to model human nature and human health, and a set of self-regulatory mechanisms are proposed. But they do not consider the role of cognitive regulators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent antisocial behavior: A developmental taxonomy.

TL;DR: It is suggested that delinquency conceals 2 distinct categories of individuals, each with a unique natural history and etiology: a small group engages in antisocial behavior of 1 sort or another at every life stage, whereas a larger group is antisocial only during adolescence.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review and reformulation of social information-processing mechanisms in children's social adjustment.

TL;DR: In this article, the relation between social information processing and social adjustment in childhood is reviewed and interpreted within the framework of a reformulated model of human performance and social exchange, which proves to assimilate almost all previous studies and is a useful heuristic device for organizing the field.
Journal Article

Controlled and Automatic Human Information Processing: 1. Detection, Search, and Attention.

TL;DR: A series of studies using both reaction time and accuracy measures is presented, which traces these concepts in the form of automatic detection and controlled, search through the areas of detection, search, and attention and resolves a number of apparent conflicts in the literature.
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