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DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1984.tb00280.x
OpenAccess: Closed
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The Effects of Social Skills Training and Peer Involvement on the Social Adjustment of Preadolescents

Karen L. Bierman,Wyndol Furman

Psychology
Social skills
Superordinate goals
1984
This study examined the effects of social skills training and peer involvement on the peer acceptance of disliked preadolescents. 56 fifth- and sixth-grade children were identified as unaccepted by their peers and deficient in conversational skills. These children were then randomly assigned to 1 of 4 treatment conditions: (1) conversational skills training (individual coaching), (2) peer involvement under superordinate goals (group experience), (3) conversational skills training combined with peer involvement (group experience with coaching), and (4) a no-treatment control. Differential treatment effects were observed at both a posttreatment and follow-up assessment. As predicted, conversational skills training promoted skill acquisition and increased skillful social interaction. Peer involvement increased peer acceptance and children's self-perceptions of their social efficacy. The results were interpreted in terms of a developmentally based multidimensional model of social competence.
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    The Effects of Social Skills Training and Peer Involvement on the Social Adjustment of Preadolescents” is a paper by Karen L. Bierman Wyndol Furman published in 1984. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.