When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro. - Hunter S. Thompson

08 May 2005

Relational aggression in preschoolers

Whew. The rules for primate dominance hierarchies are apparently powerfully engraved in our brains.

Study: Meanness in girls starts as early as age 3 (AP, via Yahoo News.)

"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.

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