Introduction
Aggression among school children is a commonly studied and discussed top in the media.
Aggression is not nice, but according to a new study, aggression is normal human behavior that is part of normal development, at least in boys (Isen et al., 2015). |
One way to measure aggressive behavior at school is the aggression scale developed by Pamela Orpinas and Ralph Frankowski (2001).
This short 11-item scale was developed in Texas for children in US middle school.
The scale ranges from 0 to 66. Boys scored 19.3 and girls 13.2.
See also the PsyToolkit implementation of the Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire |
Run the demo
Legal stuff
The scale and items were presented in a journal and seemingly can be used by anyone for research purposes.
Technically
This is a very straigtforward scale. Note that custom scores (starting with 0) are used in the scale. These scores are given in curley brackets (e.g., {score=2}).
The survey code for PsyToolkit
scale: times - {score=0} never - {score=1} 1 time - {score=2} 2 times - {score=3} 3 times - {score=4} 4 times - {score=5} 5 times - {score=6} 6 times or more l: aggression t: scale times q: Please answer the following questions thinking of<br> what you actually did <b>during the last 7 days.</b><br><br> For each question, answer how many times you did that behavior <b>during the last 7 days.</b><br> - I teased students to make them angry. - I got angry very easily with someone. - I fought back when someone hit me first. - I said things about other kids to make other students laugh. - I encouraged other students to fight. - I pushed or shoved other students. - I was angry most of the day. - I got into a physical fight because I was angry. - I slapped or kicked someone. - I called other students bad names. - I threatened to hurt or to hit someone. l: aggressionscore t: set - sum $aggression l: feedback t: info q: Your aggression score is {$aggressionscore} on a range from 0 to 66.<br> In the original study developing the scale, the following averages were found:<br> <ul> <li>Boys: 19.3 <li>Girls: 13.2 </ul>
References
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Orpinas, P., and Frankowski, R. (2001). The Aggression Scale: A Self-Report Measure of Aggressive Behavior for Young Adolescents. Journal of Early Adolescence, 21, 50-67.
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Isen, J.D., McGue, M.K., and Iacono, W.G. (2015). Aggressive-antisocial boys develop into physically strong young men. Psychological Science, in press, but online.