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- Title
Longitudinal associations between submissive/nonassertive social behavior and different types of peer victimization.
- Authors
Fox, Claire L.; Boulton, Michael J.
- Abstract
Previous research, primarily in North America, has found that submissive and nonassertive behaviors are associated with peer victimization during childhood. A limitation of this work has been the failure to examine the relationships between such behaviors and different types of peer victimization. To overcome this weakness, we developed an inventory to assess the bidirectional longitudinal associations between three different types of victimization and submissive/nonassertive social behavior. The inventory was completed by 449 children aged 9 to 11 years at two time points over the course of an academic year. The inventory generated self-report scores and peer nominations. A robust finding was that submissive/nonassertive social behavior predicted an increase in social exclusion only. In examining the other direction of the relationship, we found that only social exclusion predicted changes in submissive/nonassertive social behavior over time. The findings advance our understanding of the social skills deficits that put children at risk for peer victimization, and of the implications of victimization for the development of submissive/nonassertive social skills problems.
- Subjects
SUBMISSIVENESS; ASSERTIVENESS (Psychology); INTERPERSONAL relations; SOCIAL skills; PEER relations; CRIME victims; ASSERTIVENESS in children
- Publication
Violence & Victims, 2006, Vol 21, Issue 3, p383
- ISSN
0886-6708
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1891/vivi.21.3.383