< %=imgalt%>
Britney Spears ~ MTV Video Music Awards ~ Angelina Jolie ~ Jennifer Lopez ~ All Celebrities ~ All Actress ~ All Actors ~ All Singers
Home / Entertainment News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 9, 2008
Nearly all high school cliques are racially divided: Study
University of Alabama at Birmingham

Cholesterol lowering drugs may adversely affect muscle repair

Sarcasm risky in political speeches

Hope is all one needs to fight depression

Genes linked with obesity identified

More on University of Alabama at Birmingham

Entertainment News

Most awaited fashion fiesta kicks off in Delhi
The much-awaited five-day long fashion fiesta Wills Lifestyle India Fashion week kicked off here today. ANI

Helen Mirren denies looking as sexy in real life as in a bikini shot
English actress Dame Helen Mirren, 63, denies that she looks as sexy in real life as she did in a bikini shot that was taken in France this summer. ANI

How subconscious brand exposure affects your choices
Its a well-known fact that repeated exposure to brands have a major impact on the consumer choices. Now, a new study has found that even subconscious encounters can influence choices. ANI

Nearly all high school cliques are racially divided: Study

A new study has shed light on school cliques and gossiping, by showing that nearly all high school groups are divided along racial lines.

Washington, March 9 : A new study has shed light on school cliques and gossiping, by showing that nearly all high school groups are divided along racial lines.

University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) sociologist Casey Borch, Ph.D co-authored a study with Antonius Cillessen, Ph.D., at the Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen and the University of Connecticut to find out how aggression, popularity and academic achievement influenced membership in cliques.

The researchers surveyed nearly 600 boys and girls, starting in the 4th grade through the 12th grade, in a public school system in a working class community in the Northeast from 1995-2004.

The study found that physical aggression helped popularity in the earlier grades but not as the children grew older. Membership in physically aggressive cliques tended to decline over time whereas membership in cliques where students gossiped, spread rumours and excluded others, which is called relational aggression, remained constant over time.

In fact, the study found that behaviours such as gossiping and spreading rumors increased the perceived popularity, or social visibility, of the students over time, Borch said.

"So how well known you are is enhanced by one's ability to be relationally aggressive. So a lot of popular kids may not be well liked, but they are relationally aggressive and their peers think that they are popular. So it makes some sense that relational aggression is a chosen tactic used by adolescents interested in popularity," Borch said.

"The 'mean girls' effect suggests that girls engage more in this type of behaviour more than boys, and as a rule, they do, but the people who gain more from this behaviour are minority boys. Minority boys who are relationally aggressive gained a lot more popularity over time than any other group, although, they were less likely to use the behaviour.

"One surprising finding was that in the fourth grade about 50 percent of the cliques were of mixed race and ethnicity, but by the 12th grade, nearly 90 percent of cliques were of the one race or ethnicity, so only 10 percent were mixed. This was even more surprising given the increasing ethnic diversity of the school system we studied over time. We did not expect to see the racial composition of the cliques to go from 50 percent mixed to just 10 percent," he added.

For their study, the researchers had students write down the names their best friends. To identify the cliques, the researchers compared the lists to determine whether students' feelings were reciprocated.

The study subjects also were asked to identify the overtly aggressive classmates, those who regularly started fights, said mean things or bullied others, and those who gossiped, told rumours or excluded others from a group. Then students were asked to rate the school's cliques on popularity, social preference and overt and relational aggression.

"Cliques aren't necessarily bad. It just depends on the kind of clique a child is in. The common misconception is that they [cliques] are inherently bad and that kids in cliques exclude other people or that they are separatists or that they're somehow disconnected from the larger network as a whole and that is fundamentally not true," Borch said.

"Kids are good social observers. They know who the aggressive kids are and who's popular. So listen to your kids. If they say someone is trouble, they may very well be," he added.

The study will be published as a chapter in the forthcoming book "Modeling Dyadic and Interdependent Data in Developmental Research" later this year.

ANI

October 15, 2008

October 14, 2008

October 13, 2008

October 12, 2008

October 11, 2008

October 10, 2008