Contrasted social competence differences between popular and rejected elementary-age students using the Social Skills Rating System (Gresham & Elliott, 1990), a standardized measure of social skills and interfering problem behaviors. Using the Coie, Dodge, and Coppotelli (1982) method of sociometric classification, 25 children were classified as Rejected and 24 students were classified as Popular out of an initial screening sample of 336 students in grades kindergarten through 6. Initial grade-level analysis (kindergarten through 2 vs. 3 through 6) yielded no age effects on any dependent measure for popular and rejected groups. Subsequent analyses showed that popular students had higher levels of social skills and fewer interfering problem behaviors than rejected students. No Gender nor Gender X Sociometric Status interaction effects as noted. Interpretation of the lack of gender effects centered around the use of extreme groups in the current investigation compared to prior studies using behavior rating scales with children whose behavioral functioning was distributed across the full range of possible scores. Directions for future research include studies with other sociometrically defined groups, investigations of sociometrically defined groups in handicapped populations, and research on the effects of reputational "biases" on rejected children's behavioral functioning in peer groups.Identification of and intervention with children who experience problems in initiating and maintaining satisfying relationships with peers have received increasing interest within the school psychological community. For example, an entire issue of the School Psychology Review was devoted to social competence (Carroll & Elliott, 1984), and there have been numerous empirical and conceptual articles in the school psychology literature concerning social corn-Requests for reprints should be directed to
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