Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4939787 | Journal of School Psychology | 2017 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
A teacher is a social referent for peer liking and disliking when students adjust their evaluations of a peer based on their perceptions of teacher liking and disliking for this peer. The present study investigated social referencing as an intra-individual process that occurs over time, using stochastic actor-oriented modeling with RSiena. The co-evolution of peer-perceived teacher liking and disliking networks with peer liking and disliking networks was analyzed in 52 fifth-grade classes in the Netherlands, with 1370 students (Mage = 10.60). Results showed that when a student viewed the teacher to like a peer, this student would also like this peer. Regarding disliking, there was a stronger effect in the opposite direction, indicating that students' disliking a peer increased the likelihood that they would view the peer as disliked by the teacher as well. In sum, partial evidence for social referencing as an intra-individual process was found. For teachers this implies that the cues they provide regarding their liking of a student, and not necessarily their disliking, may affect individual peers' liking of this student.
Keywords
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Psychology
Applied Psychology
Authors
Marloes M.H.G. Hendrickx, Tim Mainhard, Henrike J. Boor-Klip, Mieke Brekelmans,