A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Friend influence and susceptibility to influence on emotions towards math: The role of adolescent temperament




AuthorsKiuru, Noona; DeLay, Dawn; Tervahartiala, Katja; Polet, Juho; Hirvonen, Riikka

PublisherWILEY

Publishing placeHOBOKEN

Publication year2024

JournalBritish Journal of Educational Psychology

Journal name in sourceBRITISH JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY

Journal acronymBRIT J EDUC PSYCHOL

Volume94

Issue4

First page 1161

Last page1176

Number of pages16

ISSN0007-0998

eISSN2044-8279

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/bjep.12710(external)

Web address https://doi.org/10.1111/bjep.12710(external)

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457551519(external)


Abstract

Background and Aims

Peer relationships during adolescence play an important role in shaping academic outcomes. The present study examined friend influences on emotions towards math, as well as the role of temperament in these influences.

Sample

The sample consisted of 350 Finnish students (mean age 13.29 years; 64% girls) who were involved in stable friendship dyads from fall to spring of Grade 7.

Methods

In this two-wave study, information on adolescents' temperament (i.e., negative emotionality, extraversion, effortful control) and on seven emotions towards math (i.e., enjoyment, hope, pride, anger, anxiety, shame, hopelessness, and boredom) was collected during grade 7. The data were analysed using longitudinal actor-partner interdependence models.

Results

The results showed that friends resembled each other in all the investigated math-related emotions. Furthermore, over and above these initial similarities, friends mutually influenced each other's math-related enjoyment and anger towards math. Students characterized by higher negative emotionality also influenced their friends with lower levels of negative emotionality towards an increase in math-related anger and a lack of effortful control made adolescents more susceptible to friend influence over math-related shame and anxiety.

Conclusion

Our findings demonstrate that friends influence each other over time in math-related enjoyment and frustration. Furthermore, high negative emotionality may make adolescents more influential over their friends' math-related anger and a lack of effortful control may make adolescents more susceptible to friend influence over math-related shame and anxiety. Thus, the current findings have implications for how peer relations may impact individual outcomes in mathematics, for better or worse.


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Funding information in the publication
This study forms part of the ongoing STAIRWAY – From Primary School to Secondary School study of which data collections were funded by grants from the Academy of Finland (#266851 and #294970). Manuscript preparation was also supported by the Strategic Research Council (SRC) established within the Academy of Finland (352648 and 352657) and the Centre of Excellence for Learning Dynamics and Intervention Research (InterLearn CoE) in the Academy of Finland's Center of Excellence Programme (2022-2029) (346119, 346121).


Last updated on 2025-28-02 at 09:16