Publication | Open Access
Too Cool for School? The Relationship between Coolness and Academic Reputation in Early Adolescence
30
Citations
47
References
2014
Year
Social PsychologyEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationPeer RelationshipEducationEarly AdolescenceSocial InfluenceSocial StratificationAdolescencePsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyStudent CultureEthnic GroupYouth Well-beingSchool FunctioningSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesAcademic ReputationSocial SkillsSchool PsychologyStudent SuccessAdolescent PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentEducational StatisticsToo CoolFall CoolnessAdolescent CognitionSocial BehaviorSociology
Abstract The relationship between peer‐nominated coolness and academic reputation was examined at two time points spanning the first year of middle school ( N = 807; 52 percent female; 52 percent A frican‐ A merican; 48 percent E uropean A merican). Students predominantly nominated peers who were from their same gender and ethnic group as being cool. Associations between coolness and academic reputation differed across subgroups, were contingent upon level of disruptive behavior, and changed over time from fall to spring of the academic year. In the fall, patterns differed by gender, not by ethnicity. For both white and A frican‐ A merican boys, hierarchical regressions evidenced a null association between coolness and academic reputation; for both white and A frican‐ A merican girls, this association was positive. In the spring, findings for white girls were similar to findings from the fall. For the three remaining groups—white boys and A frican‐ A merican boys and girls—conditions worsened over time, albeit in slightly dissimilar ways. For white boys, fall coolness did not predict significant declines in academic reputation over time; nonetheless, as a group, the coolness–academic reputation was negative by the end of the year. For A frican‐ A merican boys and girls, fall coolness significantly predicted declines in academic reputation from fall to spring, although the concurrent coolness–academic reputation association was not significantly negative for either group in the spring.
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