Peer Networks and School Performance

  • R.J. Meyenn

    Student thesis: Doctoral ThesisDoctor of Philosophy

    Abstract

    This thesis examines the social relationships of 12/13 year old school
    pupils. The thesis's intentions are three fold:-
    I To answer four basic questions about school pupils and their
    social relationships; a) How do pupils of this age range organise
    their social lives at school? b) In the network of these peers!
    social relationships are there distinctive sub-cultures? c) How
    do these peer networks form? and d) How do the peer networks interact
    with school performance, future careers and life chances of these pupils?
    ii In attempting to answer these questions a theoretical framework
    has been adopted which takes account of both interaction and structure.
    iii Methodological procedures have been employed which have allowed
    the in-depth, intensive study of one class group of pupils to be set
    in relation to the entire cohort of pupils.
    The peer network is certainly the dominant form of social organisation
    in the school lives of these pupils. The girls form clearly defined
    networks rather than pairs while the boys' peer networks are large,
    undifferentiated and bounded by the class group.
    The peer networks do exhibit distinctive, and in many ways different
    subcultural patterns. The dominant, and it often appeared the only,
    concern of the boys was football. The girls' peer networks had
    some features in common while other features, particularly attitudes
    and orientation to school and commitment to elements of teenage
    culture, differentiated the girls' peer networks.
    Organisational features of the school and the social structural features
    of the pupil's family and background in addition to age and gender are
    the factors which most affect the formation of peer networks. The
    peer network was, particularly for girls, the arena where school and
    social pressures were discussed, and strategies developed to cope with
    these pressures, and consequently of considerable importance in terms of
    orientation and future career at school and life chances more generally.
    Date of Award1979
    Original languageEnglish
    Awarding Institution
    • Aston University

    Keywords

    • sociology
    • education

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