They are a fixture of every upbringing - the cliques that rule the school.
However, researchers have been baffled by the fact some schools have more cliques than others.
Now, they say the organisation of the school - even including the number of classes it offers, could explain it.
WHAT THEY FOUND
Schools
that offer students more choice – more elective courses, more ways to
complete requirements, a bigger range of potential friends, more freedom
to select seats in a classroom – are more likely to be rank-ordered,
cliquish and segregated by race, age, gender and social status.
By
contrast, pecking orders, cliques and self-segregation are less
prevalent in schools and classrooms that limit social choices and
prescribe formats of interaction.
At
almost any American high school, the elements of teen social networks
are readily apparent: the cliques, the pecking orders and the varying
degrees of self-segregation by race, age, gender and social status.
For years, sociologists have identified seemingly universal human instincts that spur this kind of sorting.
These include the desires for familiarity and certainty, for control and dominance, and for security and support.
But
as ubiquitous as those instincts are, students in some schools form
more cliquish, hierarchical and segregated social structures than in
others.
The Stanford team say that the organizational setting of a school itself, its 'network ecology,' has a big impact.
Schools
that offer students more choice – more elective courses, more ways to
complete requirements, a bigger range of potential friends, more freedom
to select seats in a classroom – are more likely to be rank-ordered,
cliquish and segregated by race, age, gender and social status.
By
contrast, pecking orders, cliques and self-segregation are less
prevalent in schools and classrooms that limit social choices and
prescribe formats of interaction.
Smaller
schools inherently offer a smaller choice of potential friends, so the
'cost' of excluding people from a social group is higher.
In addition,
structured classrooms guide student interactions in prescribed routes
and encourage students to interact on the basis of schoolwork rather
than on the basis of their external social lives.
Those are among the conclusions of a new study, published online today in American Sociological Review.
The lead author is Daniel A. McFarland, professor of education at Stanford Graduate School of Education.
'Educators
often suspect that the social world of adolescents is beyond their
reach and out of their control, but that's not really so,'' McFarland
said.
'They have leverage, because the schools are indirectly shaping conditions in these societies.'
The study draws on an analysis of two datasets about friendships.
One considers friendships at the classroom level and the other at the school level.
At
the classroom level, the researchers tapped into detailed data of
friendships and social interactions compiled by McFarland at two very
different high schools over a two-semester period.
The school-level data came from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.
The
researchers found that large schools tend to accentuate the quest by
adolescents for friends who are similar to themselves, an instinct that
sociologists call 'homophily.'
Bigger schools offer a broader range of potential friends, as well as greater exposure to people who are different.
The researchers found that large
schools tend to accentuate the quest by adolescents for friends who are
similar to themselves, an instinct that sociologists call 'homophily.'
It's a mixture of freedom and uncertainty that spurs students to cluster by race, gender, age and socioeconomic status.
But a school's size is only one factor.
The researchers also found that a school's openness to choice spurs cliques and social-status hierarchies as well.
In
schools with a strong focus on academics, where teachers have a hand in
setting the pace and controlling classroom interactions, teenagers are
less likely to form friendships based on social attitudes imported from
outside the school.
Instead, friendships are more likely to develop out of shared school activities and similar intellectual interests.
As
the researchers put it, a positive educational climate strengthens the
school's 'system membrane' and makes it more impervious to external
criteria for friendship such as race or social status.
In
other words, a more rigid school setting can sometimes promote more
open-mindedness in making friends — a potentially valuable quality in
adulthood.
McFarland cautioned that the study doesn't mean that students are necessarily better off in small schools with less choice.
For
one thing, the practice of putting students on particular tracks based
on their apparent academic prowess often has the side effect of
segregating students according to race.
A
bigger and more diverse student population may well foster
self-segregation, but a smaller and more elite school is almost
inherently more segregated in the first place.
Source: dailymail
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