Go to main content
Formats
Format
BibTeX
MARCXML
TextMARC
MARC
DataCite
DublinCore
EndNote
NLM
RefWorks
RIS

Files

Abstract

Few studies have investigated the importance of desired friendships for those experiencing social difficulties, and no study to date has investigated desired affiliates as a type of relationship distinct from desired friendships. The current study examined the perceived, as well as desired, friends and affiliates of shy-withdrawn children and if the characteristics of desired friends and affiliates predict social dissatisfaction. Specifically, we investigated if shy-withdrawn children choose friends and affiliates based on a ‘homophily’ effect or due to a ‘leftover’ effect. Shy-withdrawal was operationalized as a combination of peer-reported anxious-withdrawal and teacher-reported shy-anxiousness for the 488 fourth and fifth grade children comprising the sample. Peer-report was used to examine the social characteristics (anxious-withdrawal, likability, popularity) of participants’ self-reported perceived and desired friends and affiliates. Participants self-reported their dyadic and network social dissatisfaction. Results indicated that although shy-withdrawal is associated with a desire for more friends and affiliates, any child who listed at least one desired friend or affiliate was more socially dissatisfied. Shy-withdrawn children did not desire relationships with similarly anxious children nor did they desire relationships with well-liked students or popular students. However, shy-withdrawal was associated with having perceived friends characterized as anxious-withdrawn, especially for girls and those not of the majority-race. The relation between shy-withdrawal and social dissatisfaction was not moderated by the characteristics of desired friends and affiliates.

Details

PDF

Statistics

from
to
Export
Download Full History