Lecture 7 Peers
Book ‘The nurture assumption’: peers play a big role in development of youth (instead of (only) the parents)
Part 1 - Importance of peers across adolescence
Higher in needs fulfillment when you fulfilled the lower needs (survival needs) > belongingness and love needs and esteem needs. These are psychological needs.
Importance also visible in the brain: social relationships. Example: exclusion from playing a game: social pain when excluded (analogous in its neurocognitive function to physical pain).
Peers become more central in adolescence
Time spent with family decreases
Time spent with peers increases
Peers compared to parents in adolescence
Differences between the two relationships
Parents = vertical (parents are more powerful), peers = horizontal relationship
Being equal in experiences, characteristics etc.
Shift from parents to friends as main source of support and happiness
Discuss with friends for romantic issues, emotional issues;
Discuss with parents for career/education issues;
Thus: relationships are different and friends become more important
Peers vs friends
Peers
Large network of same-age peers
Friends
People you know, like and with whom you develop a valued, mutual relationship (broad definition)
More specifically:
Mutual liking
Emotional closeness
Loyalty
Reciprocal validation of self-worth
General support
Time spent together
Childhood vs adolescence
From shared activities (childhood) to intimacy: trust, loyalty, self-disclosure > relying on each other
Why? It requires a certain role-play: perspective-taking, keep their own views and other's views in mind at the same time (that's complex to do)
Social competences therefore increasingly important (conflict management, perspective-taking etc.)
From same-sex to mixed-sex
And “friends with benefits”
From dyads (2) and small groups (3-4) to cliques (5-6) or larger crowds (these are larger to contain)
“Subcultures” used to form identity > understand who you are
Selection vs influence
Friends are often similar to each other
Is this due to selection or influence?
Research:
On the one hand: due to selection. Principles of interpersonal attraction:
Proximity (being close by)
Homophily/similarity (in values, interests, characteristics)
Adolescents: orientation toward school, leisure activity, SES, ethnicity (perhaps due to attitudes/prejudice)
Reciprocity
So: selection plays a role > “birds of a feather flock together”
But, parents also play a role in this selection process
Expressing disapproval
Type of school
Neighborhood
Extra-curricular activities
Adolescent personality & behavior
Influence: you learn behavior and adopt attitudes from your social environment, especially from those people that you encounter frequently and who are important to you
Friendship precedes behavior (internalizing, externalizing, lifestyle) similarity as well
So: both!
How does peer influence happen?
Different processes
Passive and active influence
Passive influence:
Asch experiment: a series of experiments that demonstrated the degree to which an individual's own opinions are influenced by those of a majority group.
There was imitation and conformity: people are imitating what others do/say > social learning theory (imitate parents/peers in order to learn)
Active influence:
Video active influence (mean girls):
Reinforcement and instigation
Being persuaded
Examples of compliance-gaining tactics:
Suggest; assertion
Compliment
Promote task
Invoke norm
Challenge
Warning
Internal vs external social reinforcement
External: reinforcement by others
Internal: reinforcement through own mental representations of what others might think/do
To conclude
Peers, especially friends, become increasingly important in adolescence
Friendships become more intimate
Similarity in friendships is due to both selection and influence process
Influence can be either passive or active, and social reinforcement can be internal or external
Part 2 – group dynamics and bullying
Fundamental human motivations in peer groups
Maslow's pyramid
Fundamental needs can also be fulfilled in groups
In adolescence, peer groups become increasingly important
Social position in group associated with psychological needs
Relation social position and psychological needs
Belonging (affection: horizontal)
Provide us with a feeling of belonging in the group
Monkey: affection
Esteem (popularity: vertical)
Extent to which the group admires you
Monkey: on the rock, “alpha monkeys” the ones who are the most popular
Group dynamics: interplay of horizontal and vertical relationships
Constantly interacting with each other
Example: if your friend (= horizontal) increases in status (= vertical), they also want to hang out (= horizontal) with the “cool kids”
This is never stable
Status: vertical relationship
Popularity as indicator of status
Popularity gives adolescents power:
Popular peers determine the group norms: implicit rules about what behaviors are accepted
Do popular peers receive more (visual) attention?
Research: computer experiment in which adolescents have to look at a screen with pictures of their peers (popular and not popular). Gazes of the adolescents are tracked. Two measurements: first gaze preference + total gaze time
Visual preference for popular peers: first and longer gazes to popular peers
Understanding group dynamics: social network analysis
Facebook: vivid social network, one big worldwide network.
Classroom: how do students interact with each other?
Measurement: peer nominations (“who...”)
Affection: social preference
Popularity
Other measurements possible as well (leadership, prosocial, etc.)
In-degree nominations: how often have you been selected in one of the answers?
Actor 1 is well liked in the peer group
Out-degree nominations
Look at friendships: who are your best friends?
Actor 1 at least perceives that he has many friends
Examples of use group process: bullying
What is bullying?
Complex phenomenon
Four main characteristics:
Goal-directed: it doesn't happen without a reason. Goal: to achieve dominance
Power imbalance: bully has more power than victim
Intellectual or physical power
Repetitive: it happens all over again
Harmful: it isn't perceived as a joke
Goal-directed: functional approach
Bullies' goals are not sadistic, but social in nature
Social dominance goals
Boosts your self-esteem
Without losing affection from significant others (belonging)
Show behavior that others encourage them to do
Apart from bullies and victims, who are also involved? > video
Bullies
Victim
Bystanders/outstanders: watch the bullies but don't participate
Defender
Assistant: doesn't start bullying, but helps the bully
Reinforcer: doesn't actively bully, but reinforces by (for example) laughing
Defender: standing up for the victim
Outsider: observe the bullying without playing an active role in it
Understanding who bullies whom: social network analyses
Measurement: peer nominations
“who bullies you?”
To understand what relates to bullying/victimization, this can be combined with information on...
Upper left: victims. Lower left: bullies
They are standing closer to each other
Victims form cohesive group, bullies also form a group
Also some other groups formed
Friendships are based on popularity, sex, etc.
With the information on social networks, you can make sense of group dynamics and of bullies and victims.
Social networks in anti-bullying interventions
“sociograms” for teachers
Especially in adolescence, when bullying is indirect and not visible to teachers
Teachers can understand social dynamics in their peer groups
Caution needed: confidential, lack of contextual information (specific moments of when students reported this information)
To conclude
Peer group dynamics are interplay between horizontal (affection, belonging) and vertical (status) relationships
Popular peers determine the norms and receive more attention
Social network analysis can be used to identify peer group processes
Bullying is a strategic behavior and peer group phenomenon in which all peers play a role
Part 3 – unsuccessful peer relationships
Social withdrawal
Active isolation vs social withdrawal
Active isolation: someone is isolated by others/excluded
Withdrawal: you decide to withdraw from social interactions
Subtypes
Anxious-withdrawn: there are two conflictive motivations at work. You want to approach others, but at the same time you are anxious of what could happen (> avoidance motivation).
Consequences of social withdrawal
Lower social skills
More internalizing problems
“developmental cascade model”
Model describes that social withdrawal is a problem that can for example manifest in adolescence but is already developed and escalated in interaction with others in infancy.
In adolescence it starts off appearing as a problem
When peer relationships go wrong
social withdrawal
Peer victimization
What makes someone vulnerable?
What explains peer victimization?
Bullies are strategic, want to achieve dominance. They don't want others to support the victim.
Being an easy target: undefended (not supported by others)
More maladjusted children (different in social behaviors, externalizing behaviors)
Role of parents
Parent who are rejective, low in warmth > maladjustment symptoms (socially withdrawn, depressed) > peer victimization
Or other way around: peer victimization > more internalizing/externalizing symptoms at home > parents respond to this behavior (> more rejective)
Being “different”
Others will not support you
Traditionally: specific characteristics predict victimization (e.g., being fat, ginger hair, braces, etc.)
Modern view: it depends on the norm (in the classroom or social group)
Being different from the norm: less likely to recruit support
Selection: people support those who are similar to each other
Minority youth: therefore at risk for persistent victimization in adolescence?
Ethnic, sexual or gender minority
Studie:
Three groups: not victimized, decreasing victimization trajectory, persistent victimization trajectory
LGB adolescents 3 times more likely to be in persistent than in decreasing group
More likely to be victimized (according to both self- and parent-reports of victimization)
Persistently victimized adolescents: higher risk for increased anxiety
Lack of support for handling victimization in other contexts (not only school, but also in other contexts: for example, at home)
In a period in which “being the same”/” fitting in” matters, minority adolescents (likely also ethnic, physically disabled etc.) are especially likely to be outcasts (because they are different than many others in the context)
Microaggressions
More subtle, implicit type of victimization
Video about microaggressions
Microaggressions and depressive symptoms in sexual minority adolescents (article)
Microaggressions related to depressive symptoms in adolescents
Explained by rumination (rethink about thinks over and over again)
Microaggressions are ambiguous and make the victim doubt themselves
Less explicit, but not less serious than explicit harassment
Awareness needed: normalization, not tolerance
Example: GSA's: clubs in schools promoting diversity
To conclude
Social withdrawal severe type of lack of peer relationships
Subtypes determined by approach versus avoidance motivation: anxious-withdrawn type most problematic
Developmental trajectory: social withdrawal can result in severe, internalizing problems and escalates across childhood and adolescence
Peer victimization
Victims are strategically picked: those who receive least support
Hence, minority adolescents are at risk
Also for microaggressions: more recent, subtle but equally severe form of harassment towards marginalized groups
Take home message
For adolescents, peers fulfill fundamental psychological needs of belonging (in friendship dyads, or in “fitting in” in groups) and esteem (in status)
Through selection and influence processes, adolescents become more similar to their peers (especially their friends)
Group processes can be visualized through social network analysis, which helps to identify positive, but also negative (bullying) processes
Not fitting in can result in peer victimization, explicitly or more subtle but equally serious (microaggression)
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent Development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Physical development, adolescent development- Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent cognitive development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Morality - Universiteit Utrecht
- Self and Identity - Universiteit Utrecht
- Family relations - Universiteit Utrecht
- Peers - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescents in school - Universiteit Utrecht
- Media use - Universiteit Utrecht
- Love and sex - Universiteit Utrecht
- Alcohol use and delinquency - Universiteit Utrecht
- Depression, self-harm and suicide - Universiteit Utrecht
- Suicide and related problems in adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht
- The end of adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
Notes of the course 'Adolescence Development' 2020-2021
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