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Ecology of the Peer Group (social interaction (solitary, onlooker,…
Ecology of the Peer Group
socializing agent
satisfy belonging needs
preferred to other socializing agents
influence on social, cognitive and psychological development
Parenting styles
authoratative
warm,accepting, consistent
children do not rebel
individualistic-orientation
authoritarian
strict, cold, unadjusting
children alienate themselves
risk for negative peer influences
permissive
no standards, rules
children are unpopular
drawn to peer groups that are antisocial
social competence
age
situation
personal values
social cognition
preoperational stage
intuitive rather than logical thought
concrete operational stage
apply logical principles
assumptive realities
cognitive conceit
formal operational stage
think logically about abstract ideas
reality testing
imaginary audiences
socializing mechanisms
reinforcements
approval and acceptance
modeling
imitation
situation
model
observer
apprenticeship
novice learns from expert
punishment
rejection and exclusion
developmental tasks
getting along with others
developing morals and values
morality of constraint
morality of cooperation
achieving personal independence and identity
social support
social interaction
solitary
onlooker
parallel
associative
cooperative
social play
imitative
exploratory
testing
model-building
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