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Development of Friendship
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What is a friend? How do we form and maintain a friendship?
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What is Special about Peer Relationships?
Relationships of relative equality Source of companionship and emotional support
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Intimacy The ability to share experiences with others, to establish and maintain a sense of closeness with other people
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Autonomy The ability to understand, coordinate, and negotiate one’s own needs and interests with the needs and interests of another person
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Social Perspective Taking
Understanding of how people’s points of view are coordinated with one another Robert Selman
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DEVELOPMENT OF FRIENDSHIP
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Level 1 Friendship (3-6 yrs)
Social Perspective Taking difficulty understanding that others have perspectives different from one’s own
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Level 1 Friendship (3-6 yrs)
Intimacy Function being in the same place at the same time sharing through unreflective sensorimotor imitation or “contagion”
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Level 1 Friendship (3-6 yrs)
Autonomy Function unreflective physical strategies
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Level 1 Friendship (3-6 yrs)
Concepts of Friendship physical or geographical associations temporary bonds desires of the self
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Level 2 Friendship (5-9 yrs)
Social Perspective Taking difficulty taking two perspectives into account simultaneously
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Level 2 Friendship (5-9 yrs)
Intimacy Function sharing through expressive enthusiasm, without concern for reciprocity
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Level 2 Friendship (5-9 yrs)
Autonomy Function one-way commands unchallenging accommodation
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Level 2 Friendship (5-9 yrs)
Concepts of Friendship a friend is someone who helps me lacks mutuality, lacks reciprocity
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Level 3 Friendship (7-12 yrs)
Social Perspective Taking understands that reciprocal subjective evaluations take place
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Level 3 Friendship (7-12 yrs)
Intimacy Function shared experience through joint reflection on similar experiences
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Level 3 Friendship (7-12 yrs)
Autonomy Function negotiation through cooperative or reciprocal strategies designed to protect the subjective interests of the self
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Level 3 Friendship (7-12 yrs)
Concepts of Friendship trust, cooperation reciprocal interest no sense of an enduring relationship
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Level 4 Friendship (10-15+) Social Perspective Taking
can assume a third party perspective
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Level 4 Friendship (10-15+) Intimacy Function
shared experience through collaborative empathic reflective processes
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Level 4 Friendship (10-15+) Autonomy Function
negotiation through collaborative strategies oriented towards integrating the interests of the self and the interests of the other person
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Level 4 Friendship (10-15+) Concepts of Friendship
mutual understanding mutual concern possessiveness
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non-subjective relationships
relationship based on a positive feeling relationship based on reciprocity and trust relationship based on mutual awareness and understanding
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Friendship Formation Establishing common-ground activity
GOTTMAN Establishing common-ground activity Greater communication clarity More successful at exchanging information More skillful at conflict resolution More self-disclosure
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Friendships of Very Young Children
Young children aren’t able to articulate their ideas about friendship Depth of intimacy & strategies for negotiating conflict improve with age Nonetheless, even toddlers interact differently with friends than with non-friends
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Friendships of Very Young Children
spend more time with friends attempt reconciliation more often with friends quarrel more with friends are more forgiving of friends Friends act as a support in times of change
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Friendships of Very Young Children
Loss of friends is associated with: decline in social play distress and anxiety Early friendships can be stable more than 50% of preschoolers have reciprocal friendships more than 60% of these friendships are stable over 6 months
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Sociometric Techniques
Nominations Rating scales Paired comparisons
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Popularity and Sociometrics
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Rejected-Aggressive Children
Tend to misinterpret innocent behaviors of others as hostile Poor social problem solvers Show severe behavioral problems
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Does being Aggressive mean being Rejected?
Many aggressive children tend to form their own friendship networks Many aggressive children have “best friends” Networks and friendships are composed of other aggressive children
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Rejected-Withdrawn Children
Shy, passive, socially awkward. Have negative expectations of how others will treat them. At risk of being victimized by bullies.
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Rejected children (aggressive and withdrawn) have more difficulty than other children finding constructive solutions to difficult social situations. Rejected children suggest fewer and more hostile strategies than do their more popular peers.
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Neglected Children Socially uninvolved children Are they at risk?
usually well-adapted not particularly unhappy or lonely not aggressive or hostile enjoy solitary activities
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Is there a connection between being neglected and rejected?
It may be that neglected children are children who were rejected rejection withdrawal It may be that neglected children will end up being rejected withdrawal rejection
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Controversial Children
hostile and disruptive BUT ALSO engage in pro-social behaviors appear happy and well-adjusted
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Popular Children Friendly, helpful, considerate
How do they get to be popular? Make attempts at entering group Initially go along Don’t ask too many questions Don’t try to change group’s agenda
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Stability of Sociometric Status
In the short term, popular & rejected are more stable than neglected or controversial In the long term, sociometric status is relatively unstable except for rejected children
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Close Friendship Reciprocity Quality
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Popularity Based on how many peers nominate a child as someone with whom they like to play or work. There is only a partial overlap between popularity and friendship.
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POPULARITY: involves gaining acceptance among peers
FRIENDSHIP: involves forming a stable & intimate relationship with a peer
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Parker & Asher (1993) Low accepted children (LA)
High accepted children (HA) Do LA children they have friends? What is the quality of their friendships?
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Parker & Asher (1993) HA more likely to have a best friend than LA
not all HA have a best friend many LA have a best friend best friendships of LA are more problematic than those of HA regardless of status, children without a best friend are more lonely than children with a best friend
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Popularity & Friendship contribute to children’s well-being
Popularity and Peer Acceptance serve as a context in which children develop leadership skills, assertiveness, & conflict resolution strategies Close Friendships provide a safe context for self-exploration meet child’s needs for intimacy and social support
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Consequences of Close Friendships
School performance/adjustment Social & emotional support
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How can parents and teachers help children develop the skills for creating and maintaining close friendships?
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