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ARTICLEARTICLE

Normative Beliefs and Self-Efficacy for Nonviolence as Moderators of Peer, School, and Parental Risk Factors for Aggression in Early Adolescence

Farrell, A., Henry, D., Schoeny, M., Bettencourt, A., & Tolan, P.
2010


This article was published in, and the following abstract copied from, Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology.

This study examined the direct effects of beliefs about aggression and nonviolence on physical aggression and their role as protective factors that buffer adolescents from key risk factors in the peer, school, and parenting domains. Multilevel analyses were conducted on data from 5,581 adolescents representing two cohorts from 37 schools in four communities collected at the beginning and end of the sixth grade and at the end of the following 2 school years. Individual norms for aggression at Wave 1 moderated relations of delinquent peer associations and parental support for fighting with physical aggression. Self-efficacy for nonviolence at Wave 1 moderated relations of school risk, delinquent peer associations and parental support for fighting with physical aggression. There was clearer evidence for protective effects for self-efficacy for nonviolence for girls than for boys.

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Related

Reports

  • Parent and Peer Predictors of Physical Dating Violence Perpetration in Early Adolescence: Tests of Moderation and Gender Differences
  • The Relation of Antisocial Behavior Patterns and Changes in Internalizing Symptoms for a Sample of Inner-City Youth: Comorbidity within a Developmental Framework

Experts

  • David Henry
  • Michael Schoeny
  • Patrick Tolan

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