
ITROW Research Projects - Neighborhoods and Gendered Child
Development
Gender and Aggression
Beth Vanfossen,
Institute for Teaching and Research on Women
Aggression is generally defined as action aimed at
harming another person (Perry, Perry, and Boldizar 1994), and has been
identified as a correlate of antisocial and delinquent behaviors.
Aggressive, disruptive behavioral responses as early as the first grade
have repeatedly been shown to be important antecedents of later
aggressive behavior, juvenile delinquency, conduct disorders, and drug
abuse (Block, Block, and Keys 1988; Ensminger, Kellam, and Rubin 1983;
Farrington et al. 1991; Kellam et al. 1983; McCord, 1988;
Robins 1978; Schwartzman, Ledingham, and Serbin 1985; Shedler and
Block1991;Tomas, Vlahov, and Anthony 1990; Tremblay et al.
1992). Follow-up studies of aggressive children have revealed that they
are as adults more likely to exhibit alcoholism, accidents,
unemployment, divorce, and physical and psychiatric illness (Caspi,
Elder, and Bem 1987; Farrington, 1983). In particular, aggressive
children have been found to experience major adjustment problems in the
areas of academic achievement and peer social relations (Kazdin 1987;
Walker et al. 1987).
Many empirical studies have identified family
variables as consistent covariates for early forms of aggression and
later delinquency. Families of antisocial children have been found to
employ harsh and inconsistent discipline, have little positive parental
involvement with the child, and exhibit poor monitoring and supervision
of the child’s activities (Loeber and Dishion 1983; McCord, McCord, and
Howard 1963). Patterson et al. (1992) maintain that the
relationship between a child’s coercive behavior and parental coercive
behavior is reciprocal, with each magnifying the other. They suggest
that aggressive children encounter difficulty in school with teachers
and peers, which exacerbates their own maladaptive tendencies.
There are gender differences in the display of
aggressive behavior, although the research findings on this point are
complex. Maccoby and Jacklin (1974) concluded from an extensive review
of the research on gender differences in aggression, that boys exhibited
more aggressive behavior than girls from the age of two to 3 and
continuing through life. This gender difference is furthermore found
across a variety of cultures. Hyde (1984) conducted a meta-analytic
survey a decade later, and found that gender differences in aggression
are not large, but are well established. Gender accounted for an
average of five percent of the variance in aggression found in the
combined-sex populations of the 75 studies in her sample. The mean for
males was on the average approximately a half standard deviation higher
than the mean for females. The gender difference tended to be larger for
children than for college students (accounting for 7 percent of the
variance in studies of children and only 1 percent of the variance in
studies of college students). Hyde also noted that gender differences
were larger when aggression was measured by direct observation,
projective methods, or peer reports than when measured by self-reports,
parent, or teacher reports. The consensus among reviewers was that
male-female differences in aggression are largest and most consistent
for physical aggression (Hyde 1984; Maccoby and Jacklin 1974). However,
Archer and Westeman (1981) found that much of the apparent difference in
physical aggression may stem from extremely aggressive behavior by a few
boys. And the research by Murray et al. (1998) reports that
much of the gender difference in aggressive behavior among younger
students is due to the greater rates of boys’ physical destructive
behavior. Since boys gradually decrease their use of physical aggression
over time, by the 6th grade the rates of aggression for boys
and girls are similar.
These findings are
somewhat consistent with the findings on gender differences in
aggression among the children of the Baltimore Prevention Program (www.edprevcenter.org).
Boys are more likely than girls to score high on both the teacher and
peer ratings of aggressive behavior, at all grade levels. However,
there is variation among the girls in aggression, and we found their
aggressive behavior to be affected by community violence almost as much
as was the aggressive behavior of boys.
We also found little convergence in the aggressive behavior of boys
and girls during the middle-school years. See the figure just below
which shows the lower overall aggression rates of girls, an increase
over time for both boys and girls, but little convergence in the
aggression rates in the latter years.

The next figure just below shows
aggression means for different kinds of aggressive behavior. It
indicates that the boys rate higher for all types of aggression
including relational aggression (teasing and yelling), and that the gap
between boys and girls is similar across the types of aggression
including property destruction. It would suggest that boys and girls do
not differ in the type of aggression they display, only in the frequency
with which they display it.

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