Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation in early adolescents' friendship development: friendship selection, influence, and prospective friendship quality.

Tiina Ojanen, Jelle J Sijtsema, Patricia H Hawley, Todd D Little
Author Information
  1. Tiina Ojanen: University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United States. tojanen@usf.edu

Abstract

Friendships are essential for adolescent social development. However, they may be pursued for varying motives, which, in turn, may predict similarity in friendships via social selection or social influence processes, and likely help to explain friendship quality. We examined the effect of early adolescents' (N = 374, 12-14 years) intrinsic and extrinsic friendship motivation on friendship selection and social influence by utilizing social network modeling. In addition, longitudinal relations among motivation and friendship quality were estimated with structural equation modeling. Extrinsic motivation predicted activity in making friendship nominations during the sixth grade and lower friendship quality across time. Intrinsic motivation predicted inactivity in making friendship nominations during the sixth, popularity as a friend across the transition to middle school, and higher friendship quality across time. Social influence effects were observed for both motives, but were more pronounced for intrinsic motivation.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adolescent Development
Child
Female
Friends
Humans
Male
Models, Statistical
Models, Theoretical
Motivation
New England
Prospective Studies
Surveys and Questionnaires

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0friendshipmotivationsocialqualityinfluenceselectionacrossmaymotivesearlyadolescents'intrinsicextrinsicmodelingpredictedmakingnominationssixthtimeIntrinsicFriendshipsessentialadolescentdevelopmentHoweverpursuedvaryingturnpredictsimilarityfriendshipsviaprocesseslikelyhelpexplainexaminedeffectN=37412-14yearsutilizingnetworkadditionlongitudinalrelationsamongestimatedstructuralequationExtrinsicactivitygradelowerinactivitypopularityfriendtransitionmiddleschoolhigherSocialeffectsobservedpronounceddevelopment:prospective

Similar Articles

Cited By (6)