» Articles » PMID: 19230521

Socioemotional Characteristics of Elementary School Children Identified As Exhibiting Social Leadership Qualities

Overview
Journal J Genet Psychol
Date 2009 Feb 24
PMID 19230521
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Elementary school teachers identified characteristics in 4 major socioemotional domains associated with children's social leadership: self-perception, social anxiety, attachment orientation with peers, and interpersonal goals and skills in close friendships. Participants were 260 4th- and 5th-grade students (126 boys, 134 girls) from 10 classes in a school in northern Israel. Social leadership skills were associated with positive self-perceptions in various domains, low social anxiety, secure orientation to peers, higher levels of relationship-maintenance goal, lower levels of revenge goal in close friendships, and-unexpectedly-lower levels of accommodation as a strategy to solve conflicts with a friend. Positive self-concept and attachment security were indirectly associated with leadership qualities through their significant association with prosocial orientation skills. The authors discuss these findings as reflecting an internalization of positive model of self and positive model of others in children who exhibit social leadership qualities. The authors also discuss implications of these qualities for school and class ecology, as well as the importance of culture.

Citing Articles

Character strengths as protective factors against behavior problems in early adolescent.

Qin C, Cheng X, Huang Y, Xu S, Liu K, Tian M Psicol Reflex Crit. 2022; 35(1):16.

PMID: 35641705 PMC: 9156651. DOI: 10.1186/s41155-022-00217-z.


The Association Between Relational Aggression and Perceived Popularity in Early Adolescence: A Test of Competing Hypotheses.

Gangel M, Keane S, Calkins S, Shanahan L, OBrien M J Early Adolesc. 2020; 37(8):1078-1092.

PMID: 32292222 PMC: 7156143. DOI: 10.1177/0272431616642327.


Trajectories of Global Self-Worth in Adolescents with ADHD: Associations with Academic, Emotional, and Social Outcomes.

Dvorsky M, Langberg J, Becker S, Evans S J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2018; 48(5):765-780.

PMID: 29714502 PMC: 6287970. DOI: 10.1080/15374416.2018.1443460.