Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective

The present study surveyed 644 (337 males, 306 females) high school students and found that social groups that were disidentified from schools, when compared to identified groups; (a) were perceived to be more distinctive, (b) were more sensitive to the number of competing outgroups, (c) had more cl...

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Main Author: Weber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)
Other Authors: Taylor, Donald M. (advisor)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: McGill University 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=26767
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.267672014-02-13T03:49:28ZSocial identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspectiveWeber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)Group identity.Reference groups.Self-esteem in adolescence.High school students -- Ontario.The present study surveyed 644 (337 males, 306 females) high school students and found that social groups that were disidentified from schools, when compared to identified groups; (a) were perceived to be more distinctive, (b) were more sensitive to the number of competing outgroups, (c) had more closed and cohesive group structures, (d) were perceived to have more homogeneous memberships, and (e) were perceived to be more likely to enact behavioral sanctions against members who strayed from internal group norms. While members of school-identified groups had better self-esteem on average than members of disidentified (at-risk) groups, members of disidentified groups who felt closely connected to their groups had better self-esteem than those who felt more loosely associated, and, such disidentified group members had self-esteem comparable to even identified group members. The results of the present study suggest that the dominant individualistic paradigm fails to satisfactorily explain, or address the needs of socially connected at-risk students who rely on their anti-normative groups to buoy their self-esteem and define their identities.McGill UniversityTaylor, Donald M. (advisor)1996Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: 001557398proquestno: MQ29577Theses scanned by UMI/ProQuest.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Master of Arts (Department of Psychology.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=26767
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Group identity.
Reference groups.
Self-esteem in adolescence.
High school students -- Ontario.
spellingShingle Group identity.
Reference groups.
Self-esteem in adolescence.
High school students -- Ontario.
Weber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)
Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
description The present study surveyed 644 (337 males, 306 females) high school students and found that social groups that were disidentified from schools, when compared to identified groups; (a) were perceived to be more distinctive, (b) were more sensitive to the number of competing outgroups, (c) had more closed and cohesive group structures, (d) were perceived to have more homogeneous memberships, and (e) were perceived to be more likely to enact behavioral sanctions against members who strayed from internal group norms. While members of school-identified groups had better self-esteem on average than members of disidentified (at-risk) groups, members of disidentified groups who felt closely connected to their groups had better self-esteem than those who felt more loosely associated, and, such disidentified group members had self-esteem comparable to even identified group members. The results of the present study suggest that the dominant individualistic paradigm fails to satisfactorily explain, or address the needs of socially connected at-risk students who rely on their anti-normative groups to buoy their self-esteem and define their identities.
author2 Taylor, Donald M. (advisor)
author_facet Taylor, Donald M. (advisor)
Weber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)
author Weber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)
author_sort Weber, J. Mark (Jonathan Mark)
title Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
title_short Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
title_full Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
title_fullStr Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
title_full_unstemmed Social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
title_sort social identity, disidentification, and the at-risk student : an intergroup relations perspective
publisher McGill University
publishDate 1996
url http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=26767
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