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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Meanness In Girls Can Start in Preschool
2005-05-09
EFL: Meanness in girls can start when they still are toddlers, a Brigham Young University study found. It found that girls as young as 3 or 4 will use manipulation and peer pressure to get what they want.
They needed a study to tell them that?
"It could range from leaving someone out to telling their friends not to play with someone to saying, 'I'm not going to invite you to my birthday party,'" said Craig Hart, study co-author and professor of marriage, family and human development at BYU. "Some kids are really adept at being mean and nasty." They regularly exclude others and threaten to withdraw friendship when they don't get their way. The "mean girls" are highly liked by some and strongly disliked by others. They are socially skilled and popular but can be manipulative and subversive if necessary. They are feared as well as respected.

The study is the first to link relational aggression and social status in preschoolers. It appears in the current issue of the journal Early Education and Development. David Nelson and Clyde Robinson of BYU are the other authors.
Researchers have long known that adolescents, particularly girls, engage in this sort of behavior, called relational aggression, to maintain their social status. In fact, a number of books and movies have come out recently exploring this phenomenon, including the best-selling "Queen Bees and Wannabes" and the movie "Mean Girls." "But it is striking that these aggressive strategies are already apparent ... in preschool," Nelson said. "Preschoolers appear to be more sophisticated in their knowledge of social behaviors than credit is typically given them."
It's hardwired in the DNA, getting more attention also meant you were more likely to get first crack at the roots and berries mom was gathering from the plains of Africa back in the day.
Hart said other research has found that about 17 percent to 20 percent of preschool and school-age girls display such behavior. It also shows up in boys, but much less frequently. "The typical mantra is that boys are more aggressive than girls, but in the last decade we've learned that girls can be just as aggressive as boys, just in different ways," he said.
Posted by:Steve

#8  Hey, don't carp about spending the grant money. Any credible researcher who can bang another nail into the NWF coffin deserved our support.
Posted by: mom   2005-05-09 22:32  

#7  The trick isn't in finding it out.

The trick is being able to publish without suddenly finding out you're no longer part of the "in" crowd anymore.
Posted by: Phil Fraering   2005-05-09 20:40  

#6  The NWFs are fools -- testosterone can be a wonderful thing in the right people! ;-)

Oh, and what Barbara said.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-05-09 19:26  

#5  Wait until the Naomi Wolf feminists hear about this ... you know, the ones who assume that women are sweet and we just need to eliminate testosterone poisoning for the world to be wonderful.
Posted by: too true   2005-05-09 16:36  

#4  I dunno, Fred, but I could have told them the same thing for half the money. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-05-09 16:32  

#3  Wonder how much of a grant paid for that research?
Posted by: Fred   2005-05-09 1:28:04 PM  

#2  And the "No shit/DUH" award goes to Brigham Young University for 2004! Congratulations!
Posted by: mmurray821   2005-05-09 12:46  

#1  In other news, stabbing a needle in your eye still hurts.
Posted by: BH   2005-05-09 11:27  

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