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Knox, Michele; Carey, Michael; Kim, Wun Jung – Youth & Society, 2003
Examined differences in aggressive behavior among predominantly white adolescent inpatients with and without depression. Survey data indicated that depression and gender interacted significantly. Depressed females demonstrated more physical aggression than nondepressed females, and depressed males demonstrated less aggression than nondepressed…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Depression (Psychology), Gender Issues
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Stewart-Williams, Steve – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 2002
Investigated how gender of the aggressor, target, and observer would influence perception and evaluation of aggression. New Zealand college students read vignettes describing aggressive acts. Overall, they rated women's aggression as more acceptable than men's aggression. Men considered aggression more acceptable, because they considered the act…
Descriptors: Aggression, College Students, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues
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Strough, JoNell; Diriwachter, Rainer – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 2000
Examined how the social context of working within same- or different-sex peer dyads related to gender-typed ideas expressed in creative stories. Sixth graders collaborated to write creative stories. Boy dyads' stories included more overtly aggressive ideas and fewer prosocial story ideas than girl dyads' stories. Mixed-gender dyads' stories…
Descriptors: Aggression, Collaborative Writing, Context Effect, Creative Writing
Sommers, Christina Hoff – 2000
Under the guise of helping girls, many schools have adopted policies that penalize boys, often for simply being masculine. Arguing that boys need help catching up with girls academically, and need love, discipline, respect, and moral guidance, but do not need to be rescued from their masculinity, this book scrutinizes studies and feminist doctrine…
Descriptors: Aggression, Attitude Change, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Tobin, Joseph – 2000
This book details an ethnographic study focused on how children think and talk about media representations of violence, gender, race, colonialism, and social class. Participating in the study were 162 elementary school students in Hawaii. Groups of 6- to 12-year-olds viewed clips from 2 television commercials and 2 movies and were later…
Descriptors: Aggression, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Colonialism