Bierman K L, Montminy H P
Pennsylvania State University.
Behav Modif. 1993 Jul;17(3):229-54. doi: 10.1177/01454455930173002.
In recent years, social-skills training has become an increasingly common intervention. Recipients of skill training programs have included children of all ages as well as adults, yet relatively few systematic attempts have been made to incorporate developmental considerations into program design and evaluation. Developmental research indicates that significant normative changes take place during the preschool, grade school, and adolescent years in domains such as the complexity of children's social reasoning, the focus and duration of their peer interactions, the nature of peer-approved (and disapproved) behaviors, the organization of the peer group, and the extent and nature of peer influence. Although a full understanding of the impact that these developmental changes may have on the effectiveness of various social-skills interventions awaits future research, the potential implications are numerous. In this article, developmental changes in children's peer relationships are reviewed. The implications that these changes may have for the assessment of social skills, for the design of skill training programs, and for future research are discussed.
近年来,社交技能训练已成为一种越来越常见的干预措施。技能训练项目的受众包括各年龄段的儿童以及成年人,但相对较少有人系统地尝试将发展因素纳入项目设计和评估中。发展研究表明,在学前、小学和青少年时期,儿童的社会推理复杂性、同伴互动的焦点和时长、同伴认可(和不认可)行为的性质、同伴群体的组织以及同伴影响的程度和性质等领域会发生显著的规范性变化。尽管要全面理解这些发展变化可能对各种社交技能干预效果产生的影响尚需未来的研究,但潜在的影响是多方面的。本文回顾了儿童同伴关系中的发展变化。讨论了这些变化可能对社交技能评估、技能训练项目设计以及未来研究所具有的意义。