This study compared 5 teachers’ existent strategies of aggressive behavior of 20 preschool age children who demonstrated mid- to high levels of aggression utilizing the development of the Antecedent-Behavior-Consequences (A-B-C) intervention behavior plans. Results revealed that aggressive acts decreased due to specific, behavioral-based strategies that were implemented within the 5-week study. In addition, data revealed the institutions of higher education must better prepare teachers in the areas of classroom management and early intervention strategies for aggressive behaviors.
Children between the ages of
3 and 5 who exhibit a specific emergent rise in unexpected aggressive behaviors
and poor social skills are at greater risk of facing lifelong challenges in all
areas of their lives. Excessive aggression, especially physical and emotional,
may ultimately lead to such negative consequences as school failure, drug
addiction, criminal activity, and incarceration (Barkley et al., 2000; Frey,
2000; Loeber, 1990; Pepler & Rubin, 1991; Stormont, 2000).
Researchers have attributed
the increase in aggression among younger children to their exposure to violence
as “family violence and nonfamily assaults, witnesses of family and community
violence, and viewers of media violence” (American Psychological Association,
as cited in Slaby, Roedell, Arezzo, & Hendrik, 1995, p. 1). Garbarino,
Kostelny, and Dubrow (1991) supported the idea that children’s daily exposure
to violence was being increasingly exhibited in their interpersonal interactions.
The National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) stated,
“Those children who are not directly exposed [to violence] are affected by
pervasive violence” (Slaby et al., p. 1). “Studies have shown that children
exposed to models involved in aggressive behavior increase their own aggressive
behaviors” (Wardle, 2003, p. 386). Media depictions of violent acts to resolve
issues harm preschool children who have not developed the cognitive skills to
distinguish between fantasy performances and real life. In the early 1990s,
NAEYC developed a position statement about violence in children’s lives that
included calling upon those who work with young children to act.
[It recommended
that professionals] support violence-prevention efforts and promote children’s
resilience to violence. . . The early childhood profession has an important
role to play in breaking the cycle of violence in the lives of children through
(1) professional preparation, development, and support; (2) early childhood
programs and curricula; and (3) partnerships with parents. (Slaby et al., p.
175)
Early childhood practitioners play
a particularly important role in helping children learn appropriate behaviors
and in instilling prosocial skills (e.g., sharing, taking turns) the children
will need as adults. When children learn prosocial skills, they are less likely
to fight to solve problems (Richardson, 2000; Sebanc, 2003; Stormont, 2000;
VanDerHeyden, Witt, & Gattis,
2001).
Direction of the Connection
The
purpose of this study was to determine if a relationship existed between
perceptions of aggressive behaviors and if the implementation of the A-B-C
behavior plan reduce or eliminate aggressive acts for children who exhibited
mid- to high levels of aggression. The
review below is previous research of types of aggression, aggressive children’s
profile, and early childhood practitioner’s profile.
Types of Aggression
One view is that children exhibit three types of
aggression to achieve a desired end: instrumental, hostile/physical, and
relational/expressive (
Hildebrand and Hearron (1999) asserted that children
often exhibit aggressive behaviors because they have not learned alternative
ways to express their feelings or get what they want. Therefore, they express
their feelings by harming themselves, others, and property. This behavior shows
that children need to learn how to use words to express their emotions and
learn alternative ways to solve problems.
Aggressive Children’s Profile
Aggressive children demonstrate specific behaviors
that have negative consequences for them and those around them. These children
display “verbal provocations and threats, physical fights, poorly controlled
anger, low frustration tolerance, bullying, and disruptive behavior” (Van
Bilsen et al., 1995, p. 145), and these behaviors are directed at peers,
teachers, and others with whom they interact with daily. As children continuously
demonstrate aggressive social behaviors, they “are often rejected and ‘actively
disliked’ by their peers, which causes them to retaliate aggressively or
withdraw from further social interaction, thus setting in motion a negative
pattern of social behavior that is difficult to reverse” (Farver, 1996,
p. 333). Without intervention, this learned social behavior often
continues through their lives and sets them on a downward spiral that may lead
to incarceration (Farver, 1996).
Slaby, Roedell, Arezzo, and Hendrix (1995) reported
that about “80% of children’s aggressive behaviors were directly rewarded by
particular actions of the victims, such as giving up toys, crying, or
withdrawing from the scene” (p. 158). If the victims of aggression continue with
behaviors that serve as a reward to the aggressor, the aggressor is likely to
soon commit a similar attack on the same victim. On the other hand, Slaby et
al. (1995) reported, “When the victim did not submit to (and thus reward) the
aggressor but instead stood up to the aggressor firmly but nonviolently, the
aggressor was likely to change both the type of aggression and the choice of
victim” (p. 158). This finding demonstrated that early childhood practitioners
can intervene by helping children learn to resolve problems prosocially instead
of resorting to aggression. Teachers can help children victimized by aggression
and aggressive children to learn the skills they need to resolve using social
skills.
Researchers have investigated the issue of gender
difference and aggression in children in the learning environment. Fields and
Boesser (2002) found that “Gender segregation appears to be a result of
different styles of play” (p. 64): cooperative, associative, parallel, and so
forth. Furthermore, they reported, “More boys tend to engage in
rough-and-tumble play, and girls may congregate in the playhouse” (p. 64).
Children’s developmental stages also influence their styles of play and the
distinct forms of aggression they exhibit. Girls form exclusive relationships
that can cause hurt feelings within the group, whereas boys form relationships
through dominance and power games that cause physical injuries. These findings
concurred with those of other researchers, who noted that the duration of
aggressive acts was documented from early childhood to adulthood and that boys
or men and girls or women were reported to exhibit distinct forms of
aggression, with “boys [exhibiting] physical aggression [and] girls
[exhibiting] relational aggression” (Crick, Casas, & Ku, 1999,
p. 380).
Preschool-age children tend to play more often with
same gender than with the opposite gender. How teachers view gender difference
influences their interactions with boys and girls, causing them to treat girls
“in ways that encourage compliance and dependence” and boys “in ways that
encourage assertiveness” (Fields & Boesser, 2002, p. 64). Teachers may send
mixed messages that boys should be aggressive and that some types of aggressive
behavior are acceptable. When children enter childcare centers, teachers may be
more lackadaisical in disciplining boys than girls, perhaps because boys tend
to engage in rough-and-tumble play, while girls play in the housekeeping or
dramatic play center.
Another major approach to helping children reduce aggressive
behaviors is to build self-esteem in children who lack it. Miller (2004) noted
that aggressive inappropriate behaviors indicate that children feel a
"sense of hopelessness” (p. 236). Without early intervention to reduce
aggressive antisocial behaviors, children will likely continue disruptive
aggressive habits into adulthood. Preschool is an optimal time for
professionals and parents to teach social skills such as sharing and taking
turns to solve problems as a means of obtaining the desired object (Mize &
Ladd, 1990). Children must be given concrete examples of how to respond in a
prosocial manner and chances to practice appropriate social skills for building
positive interpersonal relationships and self-esteem.
References
Barkley, R. A.,
Bell, S. H., Carr, V., Denno, D., Johnson, L. J., &
Phillips, L. R. (2004). Challenging behaviors in early childhood settings:
Creating a place for all children.
Campbell, S. B.
(1997). Behavioral problems in
preschool children. In T. H. Ollendick & R.J. Prinz (Eds.), Advances
in clinical child psychology (Vol.
19, pp. 1-26).
Crick, N. R., Casas,
J. F., & Ku, H. C. (1999). Relational and physical forms of peer
victimization in preschool. Developmental Psychology, 35, 376-385.
Farver, J. M. (1996).
Aggressive behavior in preschoolers’ social networks: Do birds of a feather
flock together? Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 11, 333-350.
Fields, M. V., &
Boesser, C. (2002). Constructive guidance and discipline
preschool and primary education (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Merrill Prentice Hall.
Frey, K. S. (2000). Second step: Preventing aggression by
promoting social competence. [Electronic version]. Journal of Emotional and
Behavioral Disorders, 1-14.
Garbarino, J., Kostelny, K., & Dubrow, N. (1991).
No place to be a child:
Growing up in a war zone. New
York: Lexington.
Gilliam, W. S. (2005). Prekindergarteners left behind:
Expulsion rate in state prekindergarten system.
Hawkins, J. D., Catalano, R. F., & Miller, Y. (1992).
Risk and protective factors for alcohol and other drug problems in adolescence
and early adulthood: Implications for substance abuse prevention. Psychological Bulletin, 112, 64-105.
Hildebrand, V., & Hearron, P. F. (1999). Guiding
young children (6th ed.).
Loeber, R. (1990). Development and risk factors of juvenile
antisocial behavior and delinquency. Clinical
Psychology Review, 10, 1-41.
McEvoy, M. A., Estrem, T. L., Rodriguez, M. C., &
Olson, M. L. (2003). Assessing relational and physical aggression among
preschool children: Intermethod agreement. Topics in Early Childhood Special
Education, 23(2), 53-63.
Miller, D. F. (2004). Positive child guidance (4th ed.).
Mize, J., & Ladd, G. W. (1990). Toward the development
of successful social skills training for preschool children. In S. R. Asher
& J. D. Coie (Eds.), Peer rejection in childhood (pp. 338-361).
Pepler, D. J., & Rubin, K. H. (1991). The development of treatment of childhood aggression.
Reguero de Atiles, J. T., Stegelin, D. A., & Long, J.
K. (1997). Biting behaviors among preschoolers: A review of the literature and
survey of practitioners. Early Childhood Education Journal, 25, 101-105.
Richardson, R. C. (2000). Teaching social and emotional
competence [Electronic version]. Children and Schools, 22, 246-252.
Sebanc, A. (2003). The friendship features of preschool
children: Links with prosocial behavior and aggression. Social Development,
12, 249-268.
Slaby, R. G., Roedell, W. C.,
Stormont, M. (2000). Early child risk factors for
externalizing and internalizing behaviors: A 5-year follow-forward assessment. Journal
of Early Intervention, 23, 180-190.
Van Bilsen, H. P., Kendall, P. C., & Slavanburg, J.
H. (1995. Behavioral approaches for children and
adolescents challenges for the next century.
New York: Plenum Press.
VanDerHeyden, A. M., Witt, J. C., & Gatti, S. (2001).
Descriptive assessment method to reduce overall disruptive behavior in a
preschool classroom. School Psychology Review, 30, 548-567.
No comments:
Post a Comment