peer pressure

(noun)

Peer pressure is the influence exerted by a peer group, encouraging individuals to change their attitudes, values, or behaviors in order to conform to group norms.

Related Terms

  • gender roles
  • Peer group

Examples of peer pressure in the following topics:

  • Peer Groups

    • Teenagers encouraging their friends to smoke, drink, or engage in other risky behavior is an example of peer pressure.
    • Peer pressure can also work in positive ways by encouraging teenagers to practice, study, or engage in other positive behaviors.
    • Among peers, children learn to form relationships on their own.
    • The term "peer pressure" is often used to describe instances where an individual feels indirectly pressured into changing their behavior to match that of their peers.
    • In spite of the often negative connotations of the term, peer pressure can be used positively.
  • The Asch Experiment: The Power of Peer Pressure

    • In a control group, with no pressure to conform to an erroneous answer, only one subject out of 35 ever gave an incorrect answer.
    • This demonstrates the importance of privacy in answering important and life-changing questions, so that people do not feel pressured to conform.
  • Informal Means of Control

    • Informal social control—the reactions of individuals and groups that bring about conformity to norms and laws—includes peer and community pressure, bystander intervention in a crime, and collective responses such as citizen patrol groups.
    • A peer group is a social group whose members have interests, social positions, and age in common.
    • The influence of the peer group typically peaks during adolescence.
    • However, peer groups generally only affect short-term interests, unlike the long-term influence exerted by the family.
    • Informal social control—the reactions of individuals and groups that bring about conformity to norms and laws—includes peer and community pressure, bystander intervention in a crime, and collective responses such as citizen patrol groups.
  • Adolescence

    • Adolescence is a period of significant cognitive, physical and social development, including changes in family and peer relationships.
    • Peer groups are especially important during adolescence, a period of development characterized by a dramatic increase in time spent with peers and a decrease in adult supervision.
    • Peer groups offer members the opportunity to develop various social skills like empathy, sharing and leadership.
    • Susceptibility to peer pressure increases during early adolescence, peaks around age 14, and declines thereafter.
    • Emotional autonomy is the development of more adult-like close relationship with adults and peers
  • Homeschooling

    • ., safety, drugs, or negative peer pressure), a desire to provide religious or moral instruction, and dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools.
  • Gender Messages from Peers

    • Peer groups can serve as a venue for teaching members gender roles.
    • Peer groups can consist of all males, all females, or both males and females.
    • Peer groups can have great influence on each other's gender role behavior depending on the amount of pressure applied.
    • If a peer group strongly holds to a conventional gender social norm, members will behave in ways predicted by their gender roles, but if there is not a unanimous peer agreement, gender roles do not correlate with behavior.
    • One thing that is an influence on peer groups is student behavior.
  • English as a Second Language

    • Supporters of ESL programs claim they play an important role in the formation of peer networks and adjustment to school and society in their new homes.
    • Having class among other students learning English as a second language relieves the pressure of making mistakes when speaking in class or to peers.
  • The Hidden Curriculum

    • Students may judge themselves harshly, and those judgments may be reinforced by peers and professors.
    • The professors, too, are distracted and pressured, whether by the need to maintain institutional prestige or by the sheer frenzy of activity interrupting their creative cycles.
  • Conformity and Obedience

    • The tendency to conform occurs in small groups and in society as a whole, and may result from subtle unconscious influences or direct and overt social pressure.
    • Obedience differs from compliance, which is behavior influenced by peers, and from conformity, which is behavior intended to match that of the majority.
  • Adolescent Socialization

    • Bullying is an example of the negative influence that peer groups can have on adolescents.
    • Peer groups are especially important during adolescence, a period of development characterized by a dramatic increase in time spent with peers and a decrease in adult supervision.
    • Adolescents also associate with friends of the opposite sex much more than in childhood and tend to identify with larger groups of peers based on shared characteristics.
    • Peer groups offer members the opportunity to develop various social skills like empathy, sharing and leadership.
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