Part 3
In my observations, I watched children between the ages of seven to twelve at a middle school during recess. Most were Caucasian and middle-class, thus I was not able to observe racial or socio-economic differences, only gender differences. Some of my observations confirmed what I had read. Children who were angry, aggressive, and did not have a group of friends to talk to on the playground were more likely to cut in line to play on popular equipment. However, the gender difference was much more pronounced than the literature might reveal. Rejected girls seemed more likely to withdraw from games, than attempt to become involved and to cheat to show mastery through cheating.
Another interesting observation was that cheating was not confined to rejected children. I noticed that in one baseball game, a popular and well-liked and highly skilled child was 'inching' off of a base in an attempt to 'steal.' There was also a great deal of 'traveling' in pick-up basketball games, and a denial that someone had been really tagged in games. In one line of children waiting for the swings, a popular girl accepted her friend's offer of a swing, which effectively meant cutting in line in front of everyone else. However, the more popular children seemed to be able to cheat in a more subtle fashion, or to conceal it in the guise of friendship, in the case of the girl, or competition, in the case of the boy baseball player, and thus they were less likely to be challenged. The less well-liked the child, it seemed; the more socially clumsy he or she was apt to be at concealing the cheating. Aggression and conflict was the frequent result when a challenge occurred to the less well-liked children. Skill had...
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