2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2007.01039.x
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Adolescent Prosocial Behavior: The Role of Self‐Processes and Contextual Cues

Abstract: Peer- and teacher-reported prosocial behavior of 339 6th-grade (11-12 years) and 8th-grade (13-14 years) students was examined in relation to prosocial goals, self-processes (reasons for behavior, empathy, perspective taking, depressive affect, perceived competence), and contextual cues (expectations of peers and teachers). Goal pursuit significantly predicted prosocial behavior, and goal pursuit provided a pathway by which reasons for behavior were related to behavior. Reasons reflected external, other-focuse… Show more

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Cited by 197 publications
(155 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
(76 reference statements)
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“…The majority of hawkers and street vendors are women. A fairly consistent finding in the literature is that girls tend to behave in a pro-social manner more often than boys (Wentzel, Filisetti & Looney, 2007). Societal expectations for girls are caring and nurturing (Reid, Cooper & Bank, 2008).…”
Section: Most Preferred Contexts As Ranked By Gendermentioning
confidence: 76%
“…The majority of hawkers and street vendors are women. A fairly consistent finding in the literature is that girls tend to behave in a pro-social manner more often than boys (Wentzel, Filisetti & Looney, 2007). Societal expectations for girls are caring and nurturing (Reid, Cooper & Bank, 2008).…”
Section: Most Preferred Contexts As Ranked By Gendermentioning
confidence: 76%
“…In contrast, more interference may be created by combining multiple goals among females, perhaps due to their higher affiliation tendencies (King et al, 2012;Patrick et al, 1997;Ryan et al. 1997;Wentzel, 1993;Wentzel et al, 2007), which may interfere with the pursuit of incompatible goals (e.g., competition, rewards). This hypothesis is also coherent with the general interdependence (females) and independence (males) tendencies that seem to be intertwined with gender-differentiated socialization (Cross & Madson, 1997).…”
Section: Outcomes Of Achievement Goal Profilesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For boys no such relationship was found. Similarly, peer support (Wentzel, 1994), peer expectations (Wentzel, Filisetti & Looney, 2007) and peer prosocial behavior (Barry & Wentzel, 2006) have been related to prosocial goal endorsement at school.…”
Section: Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%