The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression

This study sought to determine if a six session classroom intervention coupled with a teacher education program was sufficient to alter behaviors related to socially aggressive behaviors of fourth grade students. The treatment manual for this intervention was developed by Pamela McDonald Schaber and...

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Main Author: Schaber, Pamela McDonald
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3295
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-32952015-09-20T16:51:56ZThe effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggressionSchaber, Pamela McDonaldAggressiveness in childrenClassroom managementThis study sought to determine if a six session classroom intervention coupled with a teacher education program was sufficient to alter behaviors related to socially aggressive behaviors of fourth grade students. The treatment manual for this intervention was developed by Pamela McDonald Schaber and Daniel Hoard (Schaber and Hoard, 2006), following a review of the literature on ecological intervention for overt and social/relational aggression. The objectives of the intervention were to reduce aggressive behaviors through an ecological approach by: 1) educating students on types of bullying (physical and social), the role of the bystander in contributing to bullying, and the consequences for individuals and the classroom environment when bullying occurs; 2) challenging sympathetic attitudes about the appropriateness of bullying; 3) providing students with strategies for intervening when they observe bullying; 4) modeling bystander interventions; 5) giving students an opportunity to practice bystander interventions; and 6) empowering classrooms to develop a code of conduct for working together to reduce bullying. Participants were 71 fourth grade students from a Central Texas elementary school. Participants completed the Social Experiences Questionnaire -- peer-report which is a peer-rating measure of their classmates' frequency of social aggression and prosocial behavior. They also completed the Participant Roles Questionnaire -- self-report to determine how often they engaged in the different roles associated with bullying (i.e., bully, defender, assistant...). The main findings were that social aggression decreased for boys but not girls, and bully behavior decreased for both boys and girls. Unexpected findings were that prosocial behavior decreased from pre-test to post-test, and there were no changes evidenced in defender, assistant, and reinforcer behaviors. Implications and limitations for the findings are provided.text2008-08-28T23:39:25Z2008-08-28T23:39:25Z20072008-08-28T23:39:25ZThesiselectronicb6890048xhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/3295174283463engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Aggressiveness in children
Classroom management
spellingShingle Aggressiveness in children
Classroom management
Schaber, Pamela McDonald
The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
description This study sought to determine if a six session classroom intervention coupled with a teacher education program was sufficient to alter behaviors related to socially aggressive behaviors of fourth grade students. The treatment manual for this intervention was developed by Pamela McDonald Schaber and Daniel Hoard (Schaber and Hoard, 2006), following a review of the literature on ecological intervention for overt and social/relational aggression. The objectives of the intervention were to reduce aggressive behaviors through an ecological approach by: 1) educating students on types of bullying (physical and social), the role of the bystander in contributing to bullying, and the consequences for individuals and the classroom environment when bullying occurs; 2) challenging sympathetic attitudes about the appropriateness of bullying; 3) providing students with strategies for intervening when they observe bullying; 4) modeling bystander interventions; 5) giving students an opportunity to practice bystander interventions; and 6) empowering classrooms to develop a code of conduct for working together to reduce bullying. Participants were 71 fourth grade students from a Central Texas elementary school. Participants completed the Social Experiences Questionnaire -- peer-report which is a peer-rating measure of their classmates' frequency of social aggression and prosocial behavior. They also completed the Participant Roles Questionnaire -- self-report to determine how often they engaged in the different roles associated with bullying (i.e., bully, defender, assistant...). The main findings were that social aggression decreased for boys but not girls, and bully behavior decreased for both boys and girls. Unexpected findings were that prosocial behavior decreased from pre-test to post-test, and there were no changes evidenced in defender, assistant, and reinforcer behaviors. Implications and limitations for the findings are provided. === text
author Schaber, Pamela McDonald
author_facet Schaber, Pamela McDonald
author_sort Schaber, Pamela McDonald
title The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
title_short The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
title_full The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
title_fullStr The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
title_full_unstemmed The effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
title_sort effectiveness of a classroom-based intervention for social aggression
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3295
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