Teacher-rated aggression and co-occurring behaviors and emotional problems among schoolchildren in four population-based European cohorts
Male
BOYS
aggressiivisuus
150
CHILDHOOD
koululaiset
Child Behavior
CHILDREN
ADOLESCENT
0302 clinical medicine
RATINGS
PARENTS
Psychology
aggressiot
ta516
Child
10. No inequality
kohorttitutkimus
ta515
Finland
Netherlands
Schools
SDG 5 - Gender Equality
4. Education
Q
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
R
opettajat
Psykologia
Aggression
Medicine
Female
Research Article
Adolescent
Science
lapset (ikäryhmät)
prososiaalisuus
03 medical and health sciences
tunteet
Humans
Social Behavior
Educational sciences
ELEMENTARY-SCHOOL
United Kingdom
ongelmakäyttäytyminen
CONDUCT DISORDER
School Teachers
COMORBIDITY
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0238667
Publication Date:
2021-04-29T17:38:26Z
AUTHORS (15)
ABSTRACT
Aggressive behavior in school is an ongoing concern. The current focus is on specific manifestations such as bullying, but the behavior is broad and heterogenous. Children spend a substantial amount of time in school, but their behaviors in the school setting tend to be less well characterized than at home. Because aggression may index multiple behavioral problems, we used three validated instruments to assess means, correlations and gender differences of teacher-rated aggressive behavior with co-occurring externalizing/internalizing problems and social behavior in 39,936 schoolchildren aged 7–14 from 4 population-based cohorts from Finland, the Netherlands, and the UK. Correlations of aggressive behavior were high with all other externalizing problems (r: 0.47–0.80) and lower with internalizing problems (r: 0.02–0.39). A negative association was observed with prosocial behavior (r: -0.33 to -0.54). Mean levels of aggressive behavior differed significantly by gender. Despite the higher mean levels of aggressive behavior in boys, the correlations were notably similar for boys and girls (e.g., aggressive-hyperactivity correlations: 0.51–0.75 boys, 0.47–0.70 girls) and did not vary greatly with respect to age, instrument or cohort. Thus, teacher-rated aggressive behavior rarely occurs in isolation; boys and girls with problems of aggressive behavior likely require help with other behavioral and emotional problems. Important to note, higher aggressive behavior is not only associated with higher amounts of other externalizing and internalizing problems but also with lower levels of prosocial behavior.
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