A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence

Schools are often encouraged to foster a positive climate to reduce adolescent violence, but evidence on the effectiveness of this approach varies significantly. This study investigates the roots of this variation by testing alternative hypotheses about how positive school-level climate and school-l...

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Main Author: Pinchak, NP
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2024
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author Pinchak, NP
author_facet Pinchak, NP
author_sort Pinchak, NP
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description Schools are often encouraged to foster a positive climate to reduce adolescent violence, but evidence on the effectiveness of this approach varies significantly. This study investigates the roots of this variation by testing alternative hypotheses about how positive school-level climate and school-level student friendship network density interact to shape adolescent violence perpetration. Research on informal social control and network closure suggests that the violence-reducing association of positive school climate will be enhanced among schools where students are more densely tied through their friendships. Research on youth conflict and subversion of control suggests the opposite. These hypotheses are tested with data from Waves I-II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (n = 11,771; 49% Female; Age mean = 15.04, SD = 1.60). Consistent with the conflict/subversion hypothesis, analyses indicate that the inverse association between positive school climate and adolescent violence is only evident among schools with a very low density of friendship ties. Strikingly, however, there is evidence that a more positive school climate is associated with increases in violence among youth attending schools with a high density of friendship ties. These findings suggest that efforts to reduce violence by fostering cohesion among youth in their schools and other social contexts can be undermined by youth network processes.
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spelling oxford-uuid:9d5d02d1-f514-4f01-a432-b945040a2d672024-12-18T12:04:18ZA paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violenceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9d5d02d1-f514-4f01-a432-b945040a2d67EnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer2024Pinchak, NPSchools are often encouraged to foster a positive climate to reduce adolescent violence, but evidence on the effectiveness of this approach varies significantly. This study investigates the roots of this variation by testing alternative hypotheses about how positive school-level climate and school-level student friendship network density interact to shape adolescent violence perpetration. Research on informal social control and network closure suggests that the violence-reducing association of positive school climate will be enhanced among schools where students are more densely tied through their friendships. Research on youth conflict and subversion of control suggests the opposite. These hypotheses are tested with data from Waves I-II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (n = 11,771; 49% Female; Age mean = 15.04, SD = 1.60). Consistent with the conflict/subversion hypothesis, analyses indicate that the inverse association between positive school climate and adolescent violence is only evident among schools with a very low density of friendship ties. Strikingly, however, there is evidence that a more positive school climate is associated with increases in violence among youth attending schools with a high density of friendship ties. These findings suggest that efforts to reduce violence by fostering cohesion among youth in their schools and other social contexts can be undermined by youth network processes.
spellingShingle Pinchak, NP
A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title_full A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title_fullStr A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title_full_unstemmed A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title_short A paradox of school social organization: positive school climate, friendship network density, and adolescent violence
title_sort paradox of school social organization positive school climate friendship network density and adolescent violence
work_keys_str_mv AT pinchaknp aparadoxofschoolsocialorganizationpositiveschoolclimatefriendshipnetworkdensityandadolescentviolence
AT pinchaknp paradoxofschoolsocialorganizationpositiveschoolclimatefriendshipnetworkdensityandadolescentviolence