How Peers Make a Difference: The Role of Peer Groups and Peer Relationships in Personality Development
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2014 papers
Abstract
Peers are a pervasive aspect of people's lives, but their role in personality development has rarely been considered. This is surprising, given that peers are promising candidates to explain personality development over the entire lifespan. Owing to the lack of clear–cut definitions of peers, we first elaborate on their defining criteria and functions in different life phases. We then discuss the role of peers in personality development across the lifespan. We advocate that an integration of social group perspectives and social relationship perspectives is essential to understand peer effects on personality development. Group socialization theory is particularly suited to explain developmental differences between groups as a result of group norms. However, it is blind towards differences in development within peer groups. In contrast, the PERSOC framework is particularly suited to explain individual differences in development within groups as a result of specific dyadic peer–relationship experiences. We propose that a conjunct consideration of peer–group effects and dyadic peer–relationship effects can advance the general understanding of personality development. We discuss examples for a cross–fertilization of the two frameworks that suggest avenues for future research. Copyright © 2014 European Association of Personality Psychology
Related Papers
- → Friendship and Peer Rejection as Predictors of Adult Adjustment(2001)147 cited
- → On shaky grounds: Peer victimization predicts friendship instability across the ninth grade school year(2022)13 cited
- → School and Neighborhood Friendship Patterns of Blacks and Whites in Early Adolescence(1990)153 cited
- → Diverse friendship networks and heterogeneous peer effects on adolescent misbehaviors(2017)11 cited
- → Developmental trajectories of peer-reported aggressive behavior: The role of friendship understanding, friendship quality, and friends’ aggressive behavior.(2015)26 cited