The first cause may be that when clustered together, group members will encourage or dare each other more often towards risky behaviours that are anti-social. The second cause may be that it is easier to commit certain acts within a group. The third possible cause may be that people with similar deviant tendencies will cluster together (Coleman 2004, p. 187). Therefore, the causes of anti-social behavior in adolescents may be defined by the search for identity, where the similarity in beliefs, frustrations, or desires of individuals come into harmony with others and are expressed through rebellions against adults or representations of authority.
This may lead to joining a deviant peer group, which is defined by Abbott (2001) as a group which endorses criminal or anti-social behaviour (p. 116). The social identity theory suggests that adolescents may use these types of expressions of behaviour in order to search for their identity through comparisons of ways in which they are similar or different, attaching to those groups who seem to be most like the individual, or like what the individual aspires to represent. This also reflects that definition given by Erikson that an individual is searching for sameness and differences when searching for identity (Coleman & Hendry 2004).
Another theory in defining the causes for some anti-social behaviour in schools is that it is actually camouflage for students who are having learning problems. While these students may then be clustering together because of a sensed sameness, the underlying problem is that they cannot work with the established school structure; therefore, they are working against it in order to raise their self esteem through rebellion (Garner 1999, p. 23). With the White Paper of 1997, a program of ‘zero tolerance of failure’, intended that no child should be left without an education.
Part of this program was intended to focus on the individual needs of each student, using smaller classrooms and recognizing that each individual has an individual set of talents (Chitty 2002, p. 94). As students are individually addressed, their strengths and weaknesses can be addressed so that they feel and become successful (Chitty 2002, p. 94). Conversely, when learning issues prevent successful learning, deviant behaviour can be the result (Chitty 2002, p. 94). There can be a direct causal relationship between a childs learning difficulties and his or her disruptive or delinquent antisocial behaviors.
Significant associations have been found time after time between learning difficulties and antisocial behavior problems and various studies have supported this view. Children with learning difficulties might misunderstand social signals or act on impulse. Their social interpreters that assist them understand the purpose of anothers behaviors; that is, their information processing systems, do not work as efficiently as those of other children. Children with learning difficulties frequently discover themselves, in the lower faction of the academically specified rank among their peers.
Students with learning difficulties often suffer the pain of not being among those students who are the best readers or the best spellers. They know they try so much harder. They see little benefit from effort and are concerned about disappointing parents, teachers and themselves (Rutter et al. 1976). Disadvantaged social ranking, along with incapacity to correctly understand social cues, and a feeling that no matter how hard they try they cannot excel in school like other students, or their siblings.
This feeling results in regular disruptive antisocial behaviors. For such children, behaving in an antisocial manner discharges feelings of frustration. It gives a break from anxiety and can be self-reinforcing. It also diverts attention of peers, parents and teachers, from the real issues of learning difficulties (Rutter et al. 1976). According to Cooper (1992), if learning difficulties are not handled properly from an early age, the resulting behaviours will gravitate towards adjustment difficulties (p. 179).
Read More