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Peer reviewedMarion, Marian – Young Children, 1997
Argues that teachers play a major role in guiding children toward responsible anger management. Addresses what researchers know about the development of children's feeling, expression, and understanding of anger. Examines factors contributing to managing anger including memory, language, and self-referential and self-regulatory behaviors.…
Descriptors: Aggression, Anger, Behavior Development, Behavior Modification
Peer reviewedLuthar, Suniya S.; McMahon, Thomas J. – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 1996
Used the Revised Class Play to assess dimensions of peer reputation among two cohorts of ninth-grade, inner-city students. Found that popularity, isolation, aggressive/disruptive reputation, and prosocial orientation generally showed expected patterns of associations with students' adjustment, with the exception that aggression was linked with…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescents, Aggression, High School Students
Studer, Jeannine – Elementary School Guidance & Counseling, 1996
Fighting violence requires a networking approach among schools, community, and parents. This article advises elementary school counselors: (a) focus on the causes of aggression; (b) identify children with the propensity for behaving aggressively; and (c) prevent aggressive responses in children and adolescents by introducing techniques and…
Descriptors: Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Modification, Conflict Resolution
Peer reviewedTisak, Marie S.; Tisak, John – Journal of Adolescence, 1996
Investigated fourth, sixth, and eighth graders' thinking about the role of a bystander and the role of a victim in the context of aggression. Findings suggest that evaluation of behavioral responses on the part of bystanders and victims is influenced by the relationship among the parties involved. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Children
Peer reviewedDukewich, Tammy L.; And Others – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1996
This longitudinal study examined relationships among 4 risk factors (social supports, maternal psychological adjustment, maternal preparation for parenting, and child temperament), maternal predisposition for aggressive coping, and maternal abuse potential in 75 adolescent mothers and their children. Preparation for parenting was most strongly…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, At Risk Persons, Child Abuse
Peer reviewedMolidor, Christian E. – Social Work, 1996
Most gang membership research studies males; few examine the etiology of female gang membership. Presents themes of female gang membership gathered from interviews with 15 young women. Examines demographic material, family structure, initiation rites, and criminal behaviors. Explores implications for social work practice and research. (FC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Delinquency, Delinquency Causes
Peer reviewedKeltikangas-Jarvinen, Liisa – Journal of Social Psychology, 1989
Reports on a study of moral judgments in aggressive and nonaggressive children. Assessed moral judgment by presenting the children with stories of moral conflict in everyday life using peer rating. Results showed significant differences according to gender and no constant level of moral reasoning was measured in either aggressive or nonaggressive…
Descriptors: Aggression, Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedHughes, Linda A. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1988
Examines the importance of goals and style in female competition. Describes an ethnographic study of 27 girls and 12 boys playing a ball game at a Quaker school. Finds that the girls used stereotypically feminine rhetoric to support aggressive competition. (FMW)
Descriptors: Aggression, Children, Childrens Games, Competition
Peer reviewedKupersmidt, Janis B.; And Others – Child Development, 1995
Tested four different theoretical models (risk, protective, potentiator, and person-environment fit) describing ways that geographical neighborhoods might be associated with aggression and peer relationship problems in 1,271 elementary school children. Results suggest a protective effect of middle-SES neighborhoods on the aggressive behavior among…
Descriptors: Aggression, At Risk Persons, Blacks, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedSigler, Robert T. – Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 1995
Examines the history of violence in American society, explains some reasons behind these acts, and explores the implications of societal acceptance of violence. While criminologists consider extreme violence to be deviant forms of natural aggression, the paper shows that American society tolerates physical force when expressing political dissent…
Descriptors: Activism, Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Problems
Peer reviewedTurner, Patricia J. – Child Development, 1991
Preschool children's security of attachment was assessed in the laboratory, and their interactions with peers were observed in the preschool. Insecure boys showed more aggressive, disruptive, assertive, and controlling behavior than secure children. Insecure girls showed more dependent and compliant behavior, and less assertive and controlling…
Descriptors: Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, Assertiveness, Attachment Behavior
Peer reviewedEspinosa, Michael P.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1992
Measured the food intake and observed the playground behaviors of Kenyan school-age children. Well-nourished children were more active and happier, showed more leadership behavior, and were less anxious on the school playground than poorly nourished children. Amount of time spent in school was related to decreases in children's solitariness. (BC)
Descriptors: Aggression, Anxiety, Child Health, Educational Attainment
Peer reviewedBoulton, Michael J. – Early Education and Development, 1992
Reports two studies of adolescent perceptions of playful and aggressive fighting. Results suggest that some bouts of playful fighting are used during adolescence to settle disputes about dominance and that aggression may be introduced into playful fighting to settle dominance disputes. (LB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Behavior Patterns, Conflict Resolution
Peer reviewedLarson, James D. – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 1992
Evaluated anger-aggression management curriculum using cognitive-behavioral techniques for effects on urban, at-risk middle school students (n=22). Following 10-session curriculum which used video symbolic modeling, self-instruction, problem solving, and self-monitoring, significant differences between treatment and placebo-control groups were…
Descriptors: Aggression, Anger, Behavior Modification, Cognitive Restructuring
Peer reviewedSakheim, George A.; And Others – Child Welfare, 1991
Variables found more often in a group of severe fire-setting children than in a group of minor fire-setting children were clustered. Results disclosed a more primitively organized personality structure on the part of severe fire setters. This personality structure was poorly defended against expressions of aggressive or sexual impulses. (BB)
Descriptors: Aggression, At Risk Persons, Behavior Disorders, Child Welfare


