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Journal Article

Citation

Perry KJ, Ostrov JM, Murray-Close D, Blakely-McClure SJ, Kiefer JL, DeJesus-Rodriguez A, Wesolowski A. J. Exp. Child Psychol. 2021; 209: 105180.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105180

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Measurement of aggressive behavior in early childhood is unique given that relational aggression is just developing, physical aggression is still prevalent, and both forms of aggression are relatively overt or direct. The current study had three aims. The first aim was to examine the internal reliability, validity, and correspondence of five different assessments of aggressive behavior in early childhood: parent report, teacher report, observer report, child report, and naturalistic school-based observations. The second aim was to test a one- and two-factor model of early childhood aggression using confirmatory factor analysis. The final aim of the study was to investigate gender differences among different reports of aggression. Observations, teacher report, and observer (research assistant) report were collected in the children's school, and parent report and child report were collected in a lab session at one time point (N = 300; 56% male; M(age) = 44.86 months, SD = 5.55). Observations were collected using a focal child sampling with continuous recording approach, and previously validated measures were used for the remaining four informants.

RESULTS demonstrated that all measures were reliable with the exception of child report of relational aggression, and there was small to strong correspondence among the various informants. In addition, a two-factor structure of aggression provided the best fit to the data, providing evidence for divergence among relational and physical aggression. Finally, there were robust gender differences in physical aggression, but gender differences in relational aggression varied by method. The implications of different types of measurement are discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

Methods; Early childhood; Factor analysis; Aggression; Physical aggression; Relational aggression

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