Publication | Closed Access
Loneliness in Middle Childhood: Concurrent and Longitudinal Predictors
166
Citations
26
References
1993
Year
Social IsolationSocial PsychologyPeer RelationshipEducationLonelinessPeer AcceptanceAdolescenceSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologySocioemotional DevelopmentSocial IssuesChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSocial FunctioningAdolescent DevelopmentChild DevelopmentSociologyMiddle ChildhoodStable Phenomenon
The role of behavioral, sociometric, and attributional indices of social functioning in the development of peer-related loneliness was investigated in a short-term longitudinal study. Data were collected across a 1-year time span on 3 occasions from 128 third- through sixth-graders. Results were consistent with an additive model of loneliness. Withdrawn social behavior, lower peer acceptance, few or no friendships, and an internal-stable attributional style predicted higher levels of concurrent and future loneliness. Children who declined in peer acceptance, lost friends, and gained in internal-stable attributions showed gains in loneliness. Subgroup analyses indicated that children with no friends reported more loneliness than children with 1 or more friends; low-status friendless children reported more loneliness than low-status children with one or more friends; and low-status friendless children reported more loneliness than average- and high-status friendless children. Taken together, the findings suggest that loneliness in middle childhood is a stable phenomenon located in a complex web of interrelated aspects of social functioning.
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