RELATIONAL AGGRESSION IS A subtle form of aggressive behaviour that uses dyadic relationships and manipulation as a vehicle of harm. Little is known about relational aggression in preschool-age children in cultural contexts outside the United States. This study examined relationally aggressive behaviours and prosocial behaviours in Australian preschoolers. The sample consisted of 60 children aged from three to five years (35 boys, 25 girls). Teachers rated children's social behaviour in terms of relational aggression and prosocial behaviour. Results indicated that teachers report significantly more relational aggression in the oldest age group of children (aged > 4.5 years). Relational aggression was related to lower scores of prosocial behaviour (p < 0.05). No significant differences were found between boys' and girls' engagement in relational aggression and prosocial behaviours. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of recognising the prevalence of these aggressive behaviours in Australian preschool-age children and the need for immediate intervention.
References
1.
BaldryA., & FarringtonD. (1998). Parenting influences on bullying and victimization. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 3, 237–254.
2.
BjörkqvistK., LagerspetzM. J., & KaukiainenA. (1992). Do girls manipulate and boys fight? Developmental trends in regard to direct and indirect aggression. Aggressive Behavior, 18, 117–127.
3.
BonicaC., ArnoldD. H., FisherP. H., ZelijoA., & YershovaK. (2003). Relational aggression, relational victimization, and language development in preschoolers. Social Development, 12, 551–562.
4.
CrickN., CasasJ., & MosherM. (1997). Relational and overt aggression in preschool. Developmental Psychology, 33, 579–588.
CrickN., & NelsonD. (2002). Relational and physical victimization within friendships: nobody told me there'd be friends like these. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 30, 599–607.
7.
GagnonC., CraigW., TremblayR., ZhouR., & VitaroF. (1995). Kindergarten predictors of boys' stable behavior problems at the end of elementary school. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 23, 751–766.
8.
HaywardS., & FletcherJ. (2003). Relational aggression in an Australian sample: gender and age differences. Australian Journal of Psychology, 55, 129–134.
9.
KochenderferB., & LaddG. (1996). Peer victimization: Cause or consequence of school maladjustment?Child Development, 67, 1305–1317.
10.
KumpulainenK., & RasanenE. (2000). Children involved in bullying at elementary school age: their psychiatric symptoms and deviance in adolescence. Child Abuse and Neglect, 24, 1567–1577.
11.
KupersmidtJ. B., BryantD., & WilloughbyM. T. (2000). Prevalence of aggressive behaviors among preschoolers in Head Start and community child care programs. Behavioral Disorders, 26, 42–52.
12.
MonksC., & SmithP. (2006). Definitions of bullying: Age differences in understanding of the term, and the role of experience. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 24, 801–821.
13.
Murray-CloseD., & OstrovJ., (2009). A longitudinal study of forms and functions of aggressive behavior in early childhood. Child Development, 80, 828–842.
14.
NelsonD., RobinsonC., HartC., AlbanoA., & MarshallS. (2010). Italian preschoolers' peer-status linkage with sociability and subtypes of aggression and victimization. Journal of Social Development, 19, 698–720.
15.
OstrovJ. (2006). Deception and subtypes of aggression in early childhood. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 93, 322–336.
16.
OwensL., ShuteR., & SleeP. (2000). ‘Guess what I just heard!’: Indirect aggression among teenage girls in Australia. Aggressive Behavior, 26, 67–83.
17.
PetersonC. C., WellmanH. M., & LiuD. (2005). Steps in theory-of-mind development for children with deafness or autism. Child Development, 76, 502–517.
18.
RenoufA., BrendgenM., ParentS., VitaroF., ZelazoP.D., BoivinM., , (2010). Relations between theory of mind and indirect and physical aggression in Kindergarten: Evidence of the moderating role of prosocial behaviors. Social Development, 19, 535–555.
19.
RigbyK. (2000). Effects of peer victimization in schools and perceived social support on adolescent wellbeing. Journal of Adolescence, 23, 57–68.
20.
RigbyK., & SleeP. T. (1991). Bullying among Australian school children: Reported behavior and attitudes toward victims. Journal of Social Psychology, 131, 615–627.
21.
SleeP., & RigbyK. (1993). The relationship of Eysenck's personality factors and self-esteem to bully-victim behavior in Australian schoolboys. Personality and Individual Differences, 14, 371–373.
22.
SouranderA., HelstelaL., HeleniusH., & PihaJ. (2000). Persistence of bullying from childhood to adolescence – a longitudinal 8-year follow-up study. Child Abuse and Neglect, 24, 873–881.
23.
YoungE., BoyeA., & NelsonD. (2006). Relational aggression: understanding, identifying, and responding in schools. Psychology in the School, 43, 297–312.