Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Anxiety and its disorders in children and adolescents before the twentieth century
- 2 Affective and cognitive processes and the development and maintenance of anxiety and its disorders
- 3 Behavioural inhibition and the development of childhood anxiety disorders
- 4 Psychosocial developmental theory in relation to anxiety and its disorders
- 5 Neuropsychiatry of paediatric anxiety disorders
- 6 Clinical phenomenology, classification and assessment of anxiety disorders in children and adolescents
- 7 Friends or foes? Peer influences on anxiety among children and adolescents
- 8 Conditioning models of childhood anxiety
- 9 Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder
- 10 Family and genetic influences: is anxiety ‘all in the family’?
- 11 Child–parent relations: attachment and anxiety disorders
- 12 Community and epidemiological aspects of anxiety disorders in children
- 13 Onset, course, and outcome for anxiety disorders in children
- 14 Psychosocial interventions for anxiety disorders in children: status and future directions
- 15 Pharmacological treatment of paediatric anxiety
- 16 Prevention of anxiety disorders: the case of post-traumatic stress disorder
- Index
7 - Friends or foes? Peer influences on anxiety among children and adolescents
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Anxiety and its disorders in children and adolescents before the twentieth century
- 2 Affective and cognitive processes and the development and maintenance of anxiety and its disorders
- 3 Behavioural inhibition and the development of childhood anxiety disorders
- 4 Psychosocial developmental theory in relation to anxiety and its disorders
- 5 Neuropsychiatry of paediatric anxiety disorders
- 6 Clinical phenomenology, classification and assessment of anxiety disorders in children and adolescents
- 7 Friends or foes? Peer influences on anxiety among children and adolescents
- 8 Conditioning models of childhood anxiety
- 9 Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder
- 10 Family and genetic influences: is anxiety ‘all in the family’?
- 11 Child–parent relations: attachment and anxiety disorders
- 12 Community and epidemiological aspects of anxiety disorders in children
- 13 Onset, course, and outcome for anxiety disorders in children
- 14 Psychosocial interventions for anxiety disorders in children: status and future directions
- 15 Pharmacological treatment of paediatric anxiety
- 16 Prevention of anxiety disorders: the case of post-traumatic stress disorder
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Youngsters' peer relationships and friendships play a critical role in their social/emotional development. From early childhood on, children spend a considerable amount of time with peers (Ellis, Rogoff & Cromer, 1981). For example, prior to the school years, children interact with peers in child care settings, playgroups or preschool programmes. By 6 to 7 years of age, children spend most of their daytime hours in school or play settings with classmates and friends; this trend continues, and accelerates, through adolescence (La Greca & Prinstein, 1999). It is in the context of these peer interactions that children learn how to share and take turns, how to interact with others on an equal basis, and how to place others' concerns before their own. Successful peer relations contribute in positive ways to the development of social skills and feelings of personal competence that are essential for adolescent and adult functioning (Ingersoll, 1989). Indeed, volumes have been written about the developmentally unique and essential social behaviours that develop in the context of children's peer interactions (Asher & Coie, 1990; Hartup, 1996; Newcomb, Bukowski & Pattee, 1993).
Children's peer relations also make a positive contribution to emotional adjustment and well-being. Supportive friendships serve a protective function, such as by moderating youngsters' reactions to disasters (La Greca et al., 1996; Vernberg et al., 1996), and lessening the impact of parental conflict (e.g. Wasserstein & La Greca, 1996). Furthermore, during adolescence, peer relationships are instrumental in facilitating adolescents' sense of personal identity and increasing their independence from family influences (Dusek, 1991; Ingersoll, 1989).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Anxiety Disorders in Children and AdolescentsResearch, Assessment and Intervention, pp. 159 - 186Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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