"Peer Group Effects on Academic Achievement"
Of Government Girls High School Khyaban-e-Sirsyed
Rawalpindi
By
Aneela Majeed
669-FSS/MAEDU2/FO8
Department Of Education
Faculty of social Science
International Islamic University Islamabad
2010
II
"Peer Group Effects on Academic Achievement"
Of Government Girls High School Khyaban-e-Sirsyed
Rawalpindi
By
Aneela Majeed
669-FSS/MAEDU2/FO8
A Project submitted for the partial
Fulfillment of the degree of
Master of Arts in Education
(MA Education)
Department Of Education
Faculty of social Science
International Islamic University Islamabad
2010
III
IV
Allah Almighty
I asked for strength…
And Allah gave me difficulties to make me strong
I asked for wisdom…
And Allah gave me problems to solve
I asked for prosperity…
And Allah gave me brain and brawn to work
I asked for courage…
And Allah gave me danger to overcome
I asked for love…
And Allah gave me troubled people to help
I asked for favors…
And Allah gave me opportunities
I received nothing I wanted…
I received everything I need
V
Dedicated To
First of all to Allah and Holy Prophet Mohammad (Peace Be
Upon Him), to my
dearest Grandmother, my beloved Parents, to my loving
siblings and friends.
May Allah’s blessing upon them in this world and hereafter
(Amen)
VI
Acknowledgement
In the name of Allah The Most Beneficent and Most Merciful. I have no words to
express my deepest sense of gratitude to Almighty Allah, the only one who be praised,
without His help and blessings; I was unable to complete this project.
I also pay Darood-o-salam from the core of my heart to His beloved Prophet Mohammad
(Peace Be Upon Him) the ocean of knowledge, guidance and the messenger of peace for
the whole universe.
Upon to complete of this project, I wish to record my highest appreciation to my
respective supervisor Miss Zarina for her diligence and kindness for me to complete this
project. She guided me and supervised my work through every phase of this research
work. Indeed her constructive criticism has been of great value to me in the preparation
of this project.
I’m very thankful to my grandmother who remembered me in her prayers and
motivated and encouraged me in studies.
My thanks also go to my parents for giving me such worth while, motivation,
financial support and love throughout my thick and thin. And who also have been a
source of inspiration. I further extend my thanks to my siblings and friends for their
indirect contribution and helping me in completing this project.
Last but not the least the special thanks to Sir Ikram and my younger brother
Junaid without their generosity it would have been very difficult for me to accomplish
this task. May Allah bless you all .Thank you.
VII
Abstract
The study was designed to measure the effects of peer group on their Academic
Achievement. In order to achieve the objectives of the study survey method was
employed.
For this study population consisted of Government Girls High School Khyaban-e-
Sirsyed Rawalpindi. A sample of 70 students was selected for the study.
The data was collected through questionnaire. Questionnaire was distributed
personally from the students. Data collected was analyzed and interpreted. Percentage
was used for this purpose.
The major findings of the research in terms of percentage was; Agree (64%),
Disagree (29.24%) and Undecided (6.74)
In the light of the findings the following conclusions were drawn:
The values of the peer group with whom the high school student spends the most
time are a stronger factor in the student's level of academic success Academic
achievement is closely linked to peer influences. Students in peer groups that do not
value education lack the stimulation and reinforcement needed to encourage personal
learning. Peer group encourages education and learning, and then the individual student
within that group will value learning, because the individual is reinforced, or rewarded,
for behavior that indicates the learning is valued. Students agreed with the questions ask
in research at 64%. They disagreed at 29.24% and undecided percentage was 6.74%.
VIII
At the end researcher made some recommendations on the basis of conclusions.
Following were these major recommendations:
The student should choose the right peers in order to improve their lifestyle,
attitudes, academic achievement and so on. The student are encourage analyze the
attitudes of their friends before they become close. It is because the positive peer can
influenced and motivated them to be good in studies.
Teachers should arrange groups of students in class in such a way that it
should comprise of bright and dull students. In this way dull students will be able
to get benefit from the bright students and it will be add to their academic
acumen.
Parents should interact with their children with love, kindness, respect,
consistency, time, boundaries and encouragement. They should take interest in their
child’s activities. This allows parents to know their child’s friends and to monitor
behavior , which is crucial in keeping children out of trouble.
IX
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1 .......................................................................................................................... 13
1.1 Introduction: ...................................................................................................... 13
1.2 Statement of the problem: ................................................................................ 15
1.3 Objective: ........................................................................................................... 15
1.4 Theoretical frame work: .................................................................................... 15
1.5 Significance of the study: ............................................................................... 16
1.6 Research Question: ........................................................................................... 16
1.7 Methodology: ..................................................................................................... 16
1.7.1 Population: ................................................................................................. 16
1.7.2 Sample: ...................................................................................................... 17
1.7.3 Sample technique: ..................................................................................... 17
1.7.4 Research Instruments: ............................................................................... 17
1.7.5 Data Collection: ........................................................................................ 17
1.7.6 Data Analysis: ........................................................................................... 17
1.7.7 Delimitation: .............................................................................................. 18
Chapter II ........................................................................................................................ 19
2 Review of Related Literature: ............................................................................. 19
2.1 Definition of Peer: ............................................................................................. 19
2.2 Definition of Peer Group: .................................................................................. 19
2.3 Peer Pressure: .................................................................................................... 20
2.4 Peer group Education: ...................................................................................... 21
2.4.1 Definitions ................................................................................................. 21
2.5 Peer Relationships in Education: .................................................................... 22
2.6 Peer Pressure Affect learning and motivation: ............................................ 23
2.7 Positive Effects of Peer Pressure: ................................................................. 26
2.8 Negative Effects of Peer Pressure: ............................................................. 27
X
2.9 Encourage Healthy and Positive Relationships: ............................................ 28
2.9.1 Specifically Parents can show support by: ........................................... 29
2.9.2 When Parents Don’t Approve: ................................................................... 30
2.10 Teenage Peer Pressure: .................................................................................... 30
2.10.1 Facts about Friendships, Peers, and Adolescence: .................................... 32
2.10.2 Facts about the teen-parent relationship during the teen years: ................. 33
2.10.3 Facts about peer friendships: ..................................................................... 35
2.11 Effective Strategies for Coping with Peer Pressure ........................................... 36
2.11.1 Nurture teens’ abilities and self-esteem so that they are equipped to foster
positive peer relationships and deflect negative pressures. ....................................... 36
2.11.2 Encourage positive relationships between significant adults and teens. . . . 36
2.11.3 Encourage diverse relationships. ............................................................... 37
2.11.4 Support parent education programs for families with teenagers. .............. 37
2.11.5 Equip youth with the skills necessary to resist negative behaviors, as well
as to make good decisions. ........................................................................................ 37
2.11.6 Teaching youth exit strategies or ways to say ‘no’ to negative pressures. 38
2.11.7 Review of Related Research Articles: ..................................................... 38
Chapter III ....................................................................................................................... 45
3 Methodology and Procedure ................................................................................... 45
3.1 Population of the study: .................................................................................. 45
3.2 Sample of the study: ....................................................................................... 45
3.3 Research instrument: ........................................................................................ 46
3.4 Data collection: ................................................................................................. 46
3.5 Data Analysis: ................................................................................................... 46
Chapter IV ....................................................................................................................... 47
4 Analysis and Interpretation of Data .................................................................. 47
Summary, Findings, Conclusion 77 s and Recommendations ..................................... 77
Summary ........................................................................................................................ 78
Findings ......................................................................................................................... 79
XI
Conclusions: .................................................................................................................. 85
Recommendations .......................................................................................................... 88
Bibliography .................................................................................................................. 89
Appendixes ....................................................................................................................... 97
Permission Letter: ........................................................................................................ 98 8
Covering Letter: ........................................................................................................... 99 9
Respondents List .......................................................................................................... 100
Survey Questionnaire
………………………………………………………………….. 104 4
XII
LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: ...................................................................................................................... 47
Table 2: . ................................................................................................................... 48
Table3: .. ................................................................................................................... 49
Table 4: …………………………………………………………………………… 50
Table 5: …………………………………………………………………………… 51
Table 6: …………………………………………………………………………… 52
Table 7: …………………………………………………………………………… 53
Table 8: . ................................................................................................................... 54
Table 9: . ................................................................................................................... 55
Table 10: .................................................................................................................. 56
Table 11: .................................................................................................................. 57
Table 12: . .................................................................................................................. 58
Table 13: ................................................................................................................ 59
Table 14: .................................................................................................................. 60
Table 15: . ................................................................................................................. 61
Table 16:. ................................................................................................................... 62
Table 17: …………………………………………………………………………… 63
Table 18: . ................................................................................................................. 64
Table 19: .................................................................................................................. 65
Table 21: .................................................................................................................. 67
Table 22: .................................................................................................................... 68
Table 23: .................................................................................................................. 69
Table 24: .................................................................................................................. 70
Table 25: .................................................................................................................. 71
Table 26: .................................................................................................................. 72
Table 27:. ................................................................................................................... 73
Table 28: .................................................................................................................. 74
Table 29: .................................................................................................................. 75
Table 30: .................................................................................................................. 76
13
Chapter 1
1.1 Introduction:
Children are socialized by the people with whom they associate through
daily interaction over the course of many years, acceptable social customs are
taught and promote. In school, children learn the skills
of interpersonal interaction. They learn to share, to take turns, and to compromise with
their peers.
The peer group exerts a most powerful social influence on the child. The peer
group is composed of status equals; that is, all children within a given peer group are the
same age and come from the same social status. A child must earn his/her social position
within the peer group; this position does not come naturally, as it does in the
family. Interaction with a peer group loosens the child's bonds to the family; it provides
both an alternative model for behavior and new social norms and values.
Peer effects are central to many important issues facing higher and lower
education. Within the educational system school choice, positive action, distance
learning, mainstreaming, selective admissions and the rise of merit scholarships
schools, all acquire the potential to alter the distribution of students. . At the
micro level, these policies can change the composition of one’s classmates along
14
various dimensions. For example can make them more or less racially, socially,
geographically, or intellectually diverse. These changes may effect among other
things, student’s attitudes, values or academic performance. In short, changes in
the distribution of students may produce peer effects. (c.f. Winston (1998)).
Other children as well as adults can have a great impact on a broad range
of issues in the child's life including achievements in school. Student achievement
is effected in many ways by the effects of a peer group. These effects may be
members of a group interaction in learning, helping each other in their studies,
share important information and so on.
Influences on student learning in an academic environment can be
numerous and contradictory. The interactions among peers are normal and essential
part of the learning process that influences the lifelong learning habits of students.
The potential effects of peer relationships are reciprocal. Some students are more
receptive than others. On one extreme, for example is the student who values and
seeks peer input on every decision. On the other is the social isolate who avoids
interaction in and out of the classroom. Students may learn better when in the
company of other strong students. Peer groups have significant impacts on student
achievement, depending on the magnitude of peer influences.
Measuring peer effects is difficult. Student outcomes depend on numerous
factors other than the characteristics of one’s peers, and isolating peer influences
is particularly problematic since people typically choose those with whom they
15
associate. Indeed, when students select a college to attend, they are importantly
choosing the peers with whom they will live and learn for the duration of their
college life.
1.2 Statement of the problem:
The study was designed to measure the effects of peer group on academic
achievement of the students.
1.3 Objective:
The objective of the study was to measure the effects of peer group in
Academic Achievement.
1.4 Theoretical frame work:
Peer grouping and its effects /outcomes variable. Peer grouping is
independent and academic achievement is dependent variable.
There is positive relationship between both variables because if peer
relationship is strong then automatically it effects on the studies are positive.
16
1.5 Significance of the study:
The study will be helpful in the field of education. It is important for
students, parents, educators and policy makers in understanding the way social
interactions affect academic achievement. In particular academic achievement and
the often corresponding level of the educational attainment tend to predict the
average earnings an individual may secure over a lifetime. For this reason,
isolating the peer effects on academic achievement will make a significant
contribution to education reform.
1.6 Research Question:
The research question is given below.
Is there any significant effect of peer group on academic achievement of the
students?
1.7 Methodology:
The following research methodology was used for the study.
1.7.1 Population:
The population of the study was the students of Govt Girls High School
of Khyaban-e-Sir Syed Rawalpindi.
17
1.7.2 Sample:
Seventy students who were between the age of 14 to 18 years old of
Govt Girls High School of Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi was the sample of the
study.
1.7.3 Sample technique:
Convenient sampling technique was used to select sample.
1.7.4 Research Instruments:
The instrument used to collect the data was questionnaire. A set of questionnaire
containing 30 questions was developed. The questionnaire was checked by Miss Zarina
to asses its validity before it was distributed.
1.7.5 Data Collection:
Data was collected through personal visit.
1.7.6 Data Analysis:
Data was analyzed in the light of the objective of the study. Percentage was
calculated for this purpose.
18
1.7.7 Delimitation:
Keeping in view the available resources of the study was delimited to
Govt Girls High School of Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi.
19
Chapter II
2 Review of Related Literature
2.1 Definition of Peer:
A person of the same legal status: a jury of one's peers.
A person who is equal to another in abilities, qualifications, age,
background, and social status.
Something of equal worth or quality: a sky-scraper without peer.
A member of any of the five degrees of the nobility in Great Britain and
Ireland (duke, marquis, earl, viscount, and baron).
Archaic. A companion.
2.2 Definition of Peer Group:
A social group, consisting of people who are equal in such respects as age,
education, or social class Teenagers usually prefer to spend time with their own
peer group.
20
2.3 Peer Pressure:
Peers are people who are part of the same social group, so the term "peer
pressure" refers to the influence that peers can have on each other. Although peer
pressure does not necessarily have to be negative, the term "pressure" implies that
the process influences people to do things that may be resistant to, or might not
otherwise choose to do. So usually the term peer pressure refers to socially
undesirable behaviors, such as tastes of fashion, music, television and academic
success etc
The level of peer influence generally increases as children grow, and
resistance to peer influence often declines as children gain independence from the
family or caregivers, and before they fully form an adult identity. Pre-school
children tend to be the least aware of peer pressure, and are the least influenced
by the need to conform. However with more social interactions outside the home
and more awareness of others, the influence of peers increases.
Pre-teens and teenagers face many issues related to conformity and peer
pressure. They are pulled between the desire to be seen as individuals of unique
value and the desire to belong to a group where they feel secure and accepted.
The result is that often teens reject family or general society values, while feeling
pressure to conform rigidly to the values of their peer group. An example of this
phenomenon is seen when young people join gangs. In joining the gang they are
21
rejecting the community's way of dressing and behaving. Yet to belong to the
gang, they must conform to the gang's own style of dress, behavior, and speech.
The changing ways of life of our peers often force us to change our ways of
looking at life and leading it. It’s a human tendency to do what the crowd does.
Few have the courage to resist the peer pressure and be their own selves rather
than being one among the lot.
2.4 Peer group Education:
2.4.1 Definitions
Peer group: Technically a peer group is any collectivity in which the members
share some common characteristics, such as age or ethnicity. It most commonly
refers to age groups in general, but more specifically to adolescent groups where
members are closely bound together by youth culture. Adolescent peer groups tend
to have:
A high degree of social solidarity,
Hierarchical organization,
A code which rejects, or contrasts with, adult values and experience.
22
From an adult perspective, peer groups are often deviant because
delinquency is supported by the rewards of group membership.' (A peer is a
member of a peer group.)
(Abercrombie, 1988)
'Peer group education is a method of information transference or role
modeling where a particular type of behavior is promoted or information
transferred. The peer educators closely match the target group in some manner;
whether it is by age, gender, etc.'
(Brammer/Walker 1995)
2.5 Peer Relationships in Education:
With entrance into education, the influence of the family plateaus, if not
decreases, as the importance of peers increases. Adolescence marks the peak of
peer influence. The demands and opinions of friends can overwhelm the needs of
family and, at times, can overwhelm the individuals themselves. As the individual
matures biologically and cognitively, the culture of education also changes, moving
the student through a system marked by a single class in early elementary school
to a system of hour-long classes in middle and high school. Student peer
preferences also change during these years. Friendships of two to three students
give way to larger group networks.
23
It comes as no surprise, then, that the relative consistency of peers allows
them to take precedence over academics and educators in later education. In
addition to school structure, factors such as biology, home life, and increased
personal responsibilities have also been explanations for students' decreased
academic motivation and increased receptivity to peer influence. Whatever the
causes, the subculture of the peer group can be very telling in determining
students' motivation to succeed in academics.
In short, the relative influence of peers or peer groups typically increases
with the age and development of the student. So, too, do the multiple functions
of peers increase. A younger student may be able to find the motivation and
desire to learn apart from classmates and friends, looking instead to values from
home and teacher. Older students are more apt to seek out those who have
similar interests and values.
2.6 Peer Pressure Affect Learning and Motivation:
Age of the student is one consideration in weighing the importance and
application of motivation to learn. Human relationships have varying degrees of
importance in motivational and learning theories. Most approaches tend to agree,
however, that students who surround themselves with peers and influences who
value learning and the educational process will also value their own learning and
strive to enhance their education.
24
Abraham H. Maslow viewed the need for love and belongingness as a step
toward achievement in his hierarchy of motivation model, which he described in
1954. In this view, the deprivation of more basic needs hinders progress along the
path to achievement. In Maslow's model, people must have love and
belongingness issues satisfied in order to address needs of achievement . For
example , a student with deprived relationship concerns will be less able to
participate in classroom learning opportunities . The ability to learn is built on a
foundation of comfortable relationships with others , including peers and family ,
and classroom learning is all about learning with and in the presence of others.
"Expectancy by value " theories define motivation as the product of the
amount of success on a task that an individual expects to earn times the amount
of value the individual places on the task . Thus , a task that the individual values
and expects to be successful at will be motivating compared to a task with lower
expected success or value . Whereas past experience can predict the expectancy
aspect of this model (e.g., the student has done well on prior essay exams ), the
value placed on the task is more mediated by outside factors , such as peers and
family ( e.g., the student's opinions are respected ). Related motivational theories
include the incentive or rewarding aspects of motivation , which may also stem
from relationships with others .
Behaviorism provides one way to explain the association between
motivation to learn and peer interactions. In basic behaviorist theories , relationships
25
between people affect learning only as much as people reinforce each other ( or
not ) in the academic arena . For example , if the peer group encourages education
and learning , then the individual student within that group will value learning,
because the individual is reinforced, or rewarded, for behavior that indicates that
learning is valued . Students in peer groups that do not value education lack the
stimulation and reinforcement needed to encourage personal learning. These peer
groups presumably stimulate and reinforce other values.
Albert Bandura's social learning theory speaks precisely to the human
interactions involved in learning . Observational, or "vicarious" learning is based
upon learning by watching then "modeling" or acting similarly to others . If the
student views and works with people who appreciate learning by engaging in
learning activities, then the student too will engage in learning and might work
harder at learning. Peers with positive attitudes and behaviors toward education will
allow and teach each other to set goals that include opportunities to learn and
achieve. If peer models do not convey positive attitudes toward learning, then the
students observing these models will not prioritize learning in their own lives .
They will learn to prioritize other goals.
In 1978 Lev Vygotsky also presented ideas on the facilitation of learning
through experiences mediated by other people . In his explanations, the learner
cannot reach full potential without the aid of others . The processes of guiding the
learner to higher stages of cognitive functioning rely on interactive human
26
relationships . Mentors– for example, teachers or more capable peers – can raise the
student's competence through the zone of proximal development (ZPD). ZPD is
defined as the gap between what a student can do alone and what the student
can achieve with assistance. In this view assistance is transitional, a "scaffold"
that is removed when it is no longer needed and the student has internalized
another's support.
In sum, varied theories agree that the values and attitudes of the peer
group are essential elements in motivation and learning. Students who surround
themselves with academically focused, goal oriented peers will be more likely to
appreciate, internalize, and exhibit these features themselves.
2.7 Positive Effects of Peer Pressure:
Peer pressure is not always bad. It can help you analyze yourself and
contemplate on your ways of life. You may be able to change yourself for the
better. Looking at what others do, can help you bring about a positive change in
your way of thinking. If you can pick selectively, peer pressure can actually
result in a positive change in your way of life. If you are fortunate to get a
good peer group , your peers can play a vital role in the shaping of your
personality. Their way of looking at life may influence you to change for
betterment. Some of your peers are your close friends, who do not pressurize
you to do things but rather inspire you to change yourself. Your peer group may
actually persuade you to bring about a constructive change in your personality .
27
Peer pressure can lead you to make the right choices in life. Good peer
pressure is being pushed in to something that you didn't have the courage to do
or just didn't cross your mind to do. Good peer pressure can also be a situation
when your friends convince you not to do something you were going to do
because it wasn't in your best interest. Good peer pressure is when you get pushed
in to something that you didn't want to do and it turned out well.
2.8 Negative Effects of Peer Pressure:
When you do not like a particular idea or when you have no inclination
towards a particular field, it is obvious that you won't like to go by it. For sure,
you won't like to go that way . But it is you peer group, which may compel you
on doing something you hate. In such cases, there are chances that you won't do
well in those things. Things you do not enjoy doing cannot fetch you success.
You cannot emerge successful in something you have never liked doing. So , it is
important that you do not lose happiness of your life by succumbing to peer
pressure.
Many a time, it so happens, that we are forced to lead a certain kind of
lifestyle due to peer pressure. You may not like partying on every weekend, using
drugs and smoking, but peer pressure may make you do all that you had never
wished to There are many teenagers who experience great pressure from their
28
peer group that forces them to take to drinking. You may take to something as
grave as drug use , and that too, only because of peer pressure. In such cases,
being overly pressurized by you peers can be detrimental to your living. Some
teenagers literally spoil their lives by giving in to peer pressure.
Peer pressure can lead to a loss of individuality. Extreme peer pressure
may lead you to follow what your peers feel right. Their pressure may compel
you to go by everything they think right. You tend to blindly imitate the masses;
you adopt their tastes of fashion, clothing, hair, music and general living . Peer
pressure can actually lead you to lose you tastes of life and force yourself to
begin liking what they like. Peer pressure is the human tendency to join the
bandwagon, in which, the person loses his/her original way of looking at life.
Bad peer pressure is being talked into doing something that you didn't want to do
because your friends said that you should. Bad peer pressure is usually the result
of wanting to be accepted by your peers.
2.9 Encourage Healthy and Positive Relationships:
It is important to encourage friendships among teens. We all want our
children to be with persons who will have a positive influence, and stay away
from persons who will encourage or engage in harmful, destructive, immoral, or
illegal activities.
29
Parents can support positive peer relationships by giving their teenagers
their love, time, boundaries, and encouragement to think for themselves.
2.9.1 Specifically Parents can show support by:
Having a positive relationship with your teen. When parent-teen
interactions are characterized by warmth, kindness, consistency, respect, and love,
the relationship will flourish, as will the teen’s self-esteem, mental health,
spirituality, and social skills.
Being genuinely interested in your teen’s activities. This allows parents to
know their teen’s friends and to monitor behavior, which is crucial in keeping
teens out of trouble. When misbehavior does occur, parents who have involved
their children in setting family rules and consequences can expect less flack from
their children as they calmly enforce the rules. Parents who, together with their
children, set firm boundaries and high expectations may find that their children’s
abilities to live up to those expectations grow.
Encouraging independent thought and expression. In this way, teens can
develop a healthy sense of self and an enhanced ability to resist peer.
30
2.9.2 When Parents Don’t Approve:
You may not be comfortable about your son or daughter's choice of friends
or peer group. This may be because of their image, negative attitudes, or serious
behaviors (such as alcohol use, drug use, truancy, sexual behaviors).
2.10 Teenage Peer Pressure:
Teenage is that phase of life when you are exposed to the world outside.
These are the years when you spend most of your time with your friends.
Teenage is the phase of beginning to become independent in life; the years of
forming your ideals and principles, the years that shape your personality and the
years that introduce you to your own self. Adolescents often spend most of their
daily time with friends and owing to this vulnerable age, they tend to imitate
their friends. The people around you are bound to influence you. However, the
effect of the influences of the masses is greater during your teen years. Parents
have a vital role to play during this phase of a person's life. Parents and teachers
need to be careful while dealing with teenagers, as they are most susceptible to
succumb to peer pressure during these years of their life. Teenage individuals
need to be taught to distinguish between the good and the bad, the right and the
wrong and should be taught to be thoughtful in life.
31
A strong support from family, an ability to differentiate between the
positive and the negative and a skill to choose friends from the peers - this three
– pronged strategy is the best way to keep away from negative peer pressure.
Friendships are very much an important aspect of the teen years.
Understanding the nature of peer influence can help support youth as they enter
into this period and follow the path towards close friendships that are hallmarks
of adolescence.
Adolescence is a time when peers play an increasingly important role in
the lives of youth. Teens begin to develop friendships that are more intimate,
exclusive, and more constant than in earlier years. In many ways, these
friendships are an essential component of development. They provide safe venues
where youth can explore their identities, where they can feel accepted and where
they can develop a sense of belongingness. Friendships also allow youth to
practice and foster social skills necessary for future success.
Nonetheless, parents and other adults can become concerned when they see
their teens becoming preoccupied with their friends. Many parents worry that their
teens might fall under negative peer influence or reject their families’ values and
beliefs, as well as be pressured to engage in high-risk and other negative
behaviors.
32
In actuality, peer influence is more complex than our stereotype of the
negative influences from friends. First, peer influence can be both positive and
negative. While we tend to think that peer influence leads teens to engage in
unhealthy and unsafe behaviors, it can actually motivate youth to study harder in
school, volunteer for community and social services, and participate in sports and
other productive endeavors. In fact, most teens report that their peers pressure
them not to engage in drug use and sexual activity.
Second, peer influence is not a simple process where youth are passive
recipients of influence from others. In fact, peers who become friends tend to
already have a lot of things in common. Peers with similar interests, similar
academic standing, and enjoy doing the same things tend to gravitate towards
each other. So while it seems that teens and their friends become very similar to
each other through peer influence, much of that similarity was present to begin
with.
2.10.1 Facts about Friendships, Peers, and Adolescence:
Friendships that emerge during adolescence tend to be more complex, more
exclusive, and more consistent than during earlier childhood. New types (e.g., opposite
sex, romantic ties) and levels (e.g., best friends, cliques, and “crowds”) of relationships
emerge, and teens begin to develop the capacity for very close, intimate, and deep
friendships.
33
The adult perception of peers as having one culture or a unified front of dangerous
influence is inaccurate. More often than not, peers reinforce family values, but they have
the potential to encourage problem behaviors as well. Although the negative peer
influence is overemphasized, more can be done to help teenagers experience the family
and the peer group as mutually constructive environments.
2.10.2 Facts about the teen-parent relationship during the teen years:
Parent relationships are not necessarily undermined by peer relationships.
During adolescence, relationships between parents and teens are more often re-
negotiated rather than rejected. During adolescence, teens become increasingly
autonomous and take on more adult roles. They also develop their own ideas and start
mapping their own lives. They begin to spend more time with and value their friends
more than they used to. Thus, it might seem as if they are starting to cut ties with parents
and reject their ideals. In fact, rather than cutting off ties, teens are just renegotiating the
parent-child relationship. What this means is that they are beginning to shift the
relationship to incorporate their increasing independence and maturity. As teens become
more mature, the type of relationship they have with their parents naturally begin to shift
as the teen begins to mature.
34
While it seems that teens are influenced by their peers, parents continue to be
the most influential factor in their lives.
Despite fears parents have about their teens rejecting their values and beliefs,
parents continue to be of significant influence. Teens report having political, religious,
and general beliefs similar to their parents, and consider their parents as being highly
significant and influential in their lives. Positive relationships between parents and teens
also equip youth to have healthy relationships with friends. Teens who have high quality
relationships with parents also report having a positive relationship with their peers.
Parent-adolescent conflict increases between childhood and early adolescence;
although in most families, its frequency and intensity remain low.
Typically, conflicts are the result of relationship negotiation and continuing
attempts by parents to socialize their adolescents, and do not signal the breakdown of
parent-adolescent relations. Parents need to include adolescents in decision-making and
rule-setting that affects their lives.
Parents who continue to communicate with their teens, even when there are
conflicts, actually maintain closer relationships.
While it might seem futile to talk to teens when it leads to conflicts and
disagreements, most teens continue to report having a close relationship with their
parents, and as mentioned earlier, they still report parents as being a significant influence
on their lives. So parents need to continue talking to their teens and maintaining an open
line of communication, rather than simply trying to avoid disagreements.
35
2.10.3 Facts about peer friendships:
Teens often have multiple layers and groups of friendships.
Unlike in childhood, when friendships usually meant two or more close friends, teens
often have multiple friends and belong to multiple groups. They might have intimate and
close relationships with one or a handful of individuals, and might also belong to one or
more ‘cliques’ or groups of friends that have similar demographics (sex, race,
socioeconomic status), orientation towards school, and other interests.
Peer friendships are dynamic.
This simply means that peer friendships may change. For instance, while teens can
have friendships that are long term, they often move from one clique to another, and they
might develop new friendships and lose others.
Peers tend to choose those who are similar to themselves.
Whether it is gender, age, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, or interests, teens tend to
gravitate towards those who are more similar to them.
Peer friendships can be a healthy venue for positive youth development.
Peer friendships can be a safe place for youth to explore their identity, learn about
social norms, and practice their autonomy. Healthy friendships provide youth with social
support for dealing with some of the challenges of adolescence, and can also provide
youth with some of the most positive experiences during those years. Many teens report
36
having some of the happiest and most fun moments with their peers, likely due to shared
interests as well close relationships.
2.11 Effective Strategies for Coping with Peer Pressure
While the point has been made here that peer influence and peer pressure do not
necessarily have to be negative, peer pressure can lead youth towards unhealthy and
unsafe behaviors. To minimize the negative effects of peer pressure, youth, parents,
school and community leaders must come together to establish workable and effective
strategies to guide teen behavior and to support their transition from children to mature,
responsible adults. Here are several strategies to consider (partly based on Brown, 1990):
2.11.1Nurture teens’ abilities and self-esteem so that they are equipped
to foster positive peer relationships and deflect negative pressures.
Adolescents with positive self-concept and self-worth will be less likely to be
easily swayed to follow others’ negative influences. It is essential that these aspects of
positive development should be encouraged in youth.
2.11.2 Encourage positive relationships between significant adults and
teens.
Parents, teachers, school counselors, other relatives and professionals should try
to have constructive and positive relationships with teens. These can serve as good
models for healthy relationships, and can be a venue through which the teens can feel
37
valued and where they can develop positive views about themselves. Youth should know
that they can go to these caring adults for help or advice about their peer relationships.
2.11.3Encourage diverse relationships.
Parents, teachers, community leaders, and clergy can model appreciation for
ethnic, gender, socioeconomic status, religious, and other differences and support cross-
group friendships. Schools and youth organizations can assist by encouraging youth from
diverse backgrounds to work and play together.
2.11.4Support parent education programs for families with teenagers.
Parents need to be better informed about the dynamics of adolescent peer groups
and the demands and expectations teenagers face in peer relationships. Information is
available through various sources including books, some parenting magazines, and other
publications such as this one. Keep your eye out for programs particularly targeted
towards families and teen issues that might be available. Seeking information is not a
sign of weakness, and showing interest in these issues might actually show your teens
that you are concerned about them.
2.11.5Equip youth with the skills necessary to resist negative behaviors, as
well as to make good decisions.
Teens will inevitably be confronted with situations where they will have to make
a decision whether or not to engage in certain behaviors, whether to give in to peer
38
pressure, and also to make other difficult decisions. It is essential that youth are given the
necessary skills to analyze the situation and make the appropriate decision. This includes
helping youth develop the skills for ‘costs vs. benefits’ analysis — teaching them to look
at both the negative and positive sides to making a decision. For instance, if being
pressured to smoke, the teen should be able to think about what the possible desired
outcomes are (e.g., peer acceptance, looking “cool,” feeling excitement about trying
something new) with the possible undesirable outcomes (e.g., becoming hooked, the
health issues, smelling bad, the financial costs).
2.11.6Teaching youth exit strategies or ways to say ‘no’ to negative
pressures.
It is best to try to deal with peer pressure before it even happens. Talk to youth
about potential scenarios, and think through strategies together on how to deal with those
scenarios if they arise. This could be done by discussing hypothetical scenarios or even
role-playing. It is helpful to think about these things ahead of time rather than dealing
with situations as they occur or trying to recover after they happen.
2.11.7 Review of Related Research Articles:
Epple, Newlon, and Romano (2002) states grouping students in
classrooms by ability can likewise have significant impacts on student
achievement, depending on the magnitude of peer influences.
39
(Epple, Elizabeth Newlon, and Richard Romano. 2002. “Ability Tracking,
School Competition and the Distribution of Educational Benefits.” 83
Journal of Public Economics, 1-48.)
Figlio (2005) focuses on the effects of peer behaviour on student
outcomes. Employing data from a single large Florida school district, he
estimates the impact of peer disruptive behaviour on individual student
behaviour and test scores. He controls for student heterogeneity via
student fixed effects, but does not include time-varying student covariates
or teacher controls. He employs a novel identification strategy; the
fraction of boys with female-sounding names in a classroom is used as an
instrument for peer behaviour. He finds that peer disruptive behaviour is
associated with both an increased likelihood that a student is suspended
and a reduction in achievement test scores.
(Figlio. 2005. “Boys Named Sue: Disruptive Children and Their Peers.”
NBER working paper no.11277. Cambridge, MA: NBER.)
Betts and Zau (2004) estimate classroom-level effects on standardized
test-score gains in San Diego, controlling for student fixed effects and for
several observed teacher characteristics, but they do not employ teacher
fixed effects. They also limit their tests to elementary school students, on
40
the grounds that only elementary students spend most of their time in a
single classroom and therefore, presumably, are more susceptible to the
influence of classroom peers than are students who move across
classrooms throughout the day.
(Betts, and Andrew Zau. 2004. “Peer Groups and Academic Achievement:
Panel Evidence from Administrative Data.” unpublished manuscript)
Stinebrickner and Stinebrickner (2001) found “compelling evidence of
peer effects in first semester grades” for women, but not men, at Berea
College (p. 8). They speculated that women may be more accepting of
roommates with different backgrounds.
(Stinebrickner, R., & Stinebrickner, T. (2001) Peer effects among students
from disadvantaged backgrounds. Mimeo)
Zimmerman (1999, 2001) found there were somewhat contradictory to
Goethe results but again it proved that students performance depends on
number of different factors, it says that weak peers might reduce the
grades of middling or strong students.
41
Sacerdote’s (2000) study with Dartmouth students found that roommates
in the top 25% on academic indices lift one’s own grades, and no gender
differences were reported.
(Sacerdote, B. (2000) Peer effects with random room assignment: results
for Dartmouth roommates. NBER working paper no. 7469)
Devadoss and Foltz (1996) report significant positive effects of class
attendance on student performance from a survey-based analysis of
students, across for US universities.
Kirby, A and B. McElroy (2003), The Effect of Attendance on Grade for
First Year Economics Student in University College Cork, The Economic
and Social Review, 34, 311-326.
(Devadoss, S. and Foltz, J. (1996), “Evaluation of factors influencing
student class attendance and performance”, American Journal of
Agricultural Economics, 78, 499-507)
Romer (1993) presented quantitative evidence on absenteeism and
performance in economics courses at 3 universities in the US. Romer
reported absenteeism to be ‘rampant’, with an overall absence rate of
about one-third. Romer also reported evidence consistent with the
hypothesis that absence affects student performance adversely, while
42
acknowledging that no causal effect had been demonstrated given the
endogenous nature of the relationship between attendance and
performance.
(Romer, D. (1993) “Do students go to class? Should they?” Journal of
Economic Perspectives, 7,167-174)
Martins and Walker (2006) find no significant effects of class attendance
on performance for students in the Economics Department at a leading UK
University, and also find no significant effects of smaller classes on
improved performance.
(Martins, P. and Walker, I. (2006) “Student achievement and education
production: a case study of the effect of class attendance”)
Tony Schwartz (1999) clarifies the strongest correlation that exists to
future success is family income. This should come as no surprise. Children
who grow up in more affluent or highly educated families enjoy
advantages that begin at birth with a more intellectually stimulating
environment. They go on to attend better schools, enjoy more cultural
opportunities and travel more widely. Their parents also have the
43
educational background and resources to help them along the way and to
expose them to a culture of high expectations and high achievement.
(Tony Schwartz (1990, January 10), What really Mattters, The New York
Times, p.30)
Zajonc (1976) describes family background variables are investment in
human capital. Zajonc found that more educated parents would transfer
some of their skills and knowledge to their children.
(Zajonc, R. B., "Family Configuration and Intelligence," Science, 2 April
1976, 227-236)
Schmidt (1983) measured the impact of time commitments by students to
various course activities on the students' performance in the given class.
The most valuable and important time commitment in a course was the
time actually spent in the classroom. That time was the most important
determinant of student success and each unit of time in the class itself
provided, among all the class related activities, the greatest improvement
in student performance. The next most important time spent on a class was
any time spent in discussion sections that accompanied the lectures. Third
in importance was any time spent studying outside of class preparing for
the class session itself.
44
(Robert M. Schmidt, "Who Maximizes What? A Study in Student Time
Allocation" American Economic Review, May, 1983, pp. 23-2)
Kirby and McElroy (2003) clarifies that attending lectures yields a
positive and significant impact on exam performance. They found that the
average effect of absences on performance is modest, but that there are
substantial adverse effects when absence exceeds certain threshold levels.
(Kirby, A and B. McElroy (2003), The Effect of Attendance on Grade for
First Year Economics Student in University College Cork, The Economic
and Social Review, 34, 311-326.)
Park and Kerr (1990) found the role of class attendance was statistically
significant in explaining student grades in those classes.
(Kang H. Park and Peter M. Kerr, “Determinants of Academic
Performance: A Multinomial Logit Approach” The Journal Of Ecnomic
Education,Spring1990,pp.101-111)
45
Chapter III
3 Methodology and Procedure
This unit present the method and procedure which was used to conduct the study.
3.1 Population of the study:
For this study population consisted of Government Girls High School
Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi.
3.2 Sample of the study:
Keeping in view the resources in terms of time and money available with
the researcher the following were taken as sample;
Seventy students of 9th and 10th class of Government Girls High School
Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi were selected by using convenient sampling
technique..
46
3.3 Research instrument:
The instrument used to collect the data was questionnaire. A set of
questionnaire containing 30 questions was developed keeping in view the objectives
of the study. The questionnaire was checked by Miss Zarina to asses its validity before it
was distributed.
3.4 Data collection:
The researcher personally visited the target area. The questionnaire was filled
by the students in class.
3.5 Data Analysis:
In order to make the study meaningful, the collected data was presented in
the tabular form. Percentage was calculated to analyze the data the whole data
was analyzed and interpreted in the light of the objectives of the study.
47
Chapter IV
4 Analysis and Interpretation of Data
This chapter deals with presentation, analysis and interpretation of data.
4.1 Presentation & Analysis of the Questionnaire for Students:
4.1.1 Table 1: Friendship plays a part in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 65 4 1 70
Percentage 92.857 5.714 1.429 70
Table no 1 shows that most 92.857% students were agreed, 5.714% students
undecided and 1.429% were not agreed that friendship plays a part.
48
4.1.2 Table 2: Friendship plays a key role in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 15 17 38 70
Percentage 21.429 24.286 54.286 70
Table no 2 shows that most 54.286 % students were not agreed, 21.429% were
agreed and 24.286 % students undecided that friendship plays a key role in studies.
49
4.1.3 Table3: You give value to your friend’s suggestions
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 57 3 10 70
Percentage 81.429 4.286 14.286 70
Table no 3 shows that most 81.429 % students give value , 14.286 %
students not give value to their friend’s suggestions and 4.286 % students undecided
that they give value or not.
50
4.1.4 Table 4: You feel that group study is more effective than
individual study
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 48 6 16 70
Percentage 68.571 8.571 22.857 70
Table no 4 shows that most 68.571% students were agreed, 22.857%
students were not agreed and 8.571% students undecided that group study is more
effective than individual study.
51
4.1.5 Table 5: Group projects are more creative than individual work
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 65 3 2 70
Percentage 92.857 4.286 2.857 70
Table no 5 shows that most 92.857 % students were agreed, 2.857 %
students were not agreed and 4.286 % students undecided that group projects are
more creative than individual work or not.
52
4.1.6 Table 6: You Gossip more when you are in group study.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 58 6 6 70
Percentage 82.857 8.571 8.571 70
Table no 6 shows that most 82.857 % students were agreed, 8.571 %
students were not agreed and 8.571 % students undecided that they gossip more or
not when they are in group study.
53
4.1.7 Table 7: You generate more ideas in group study rather than in
individual study
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 56 8 6 70
Percentage 80 11.429 8.571 70
Table no 7 shows that most 80% students were agreed, 8.571% students
were not agreed and 11.429% students undecided that they generate more ideas in
group study rather than in individual study or not.
54
4.1.8 Table 8: You think problem can solve more easily in group study
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 46 4 20 70
Percentage 65.714 5.714 28.571 70
Table no 8 shows that most 65.714% students were agreed, 28.571%
students were not agreed and 5.714% students undecided that they think problem can
solve more easily in group study or not.
55
4.1.9 Table 9: You get bore during group study
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 29 4 37 70
Percentage 41.429 5.714 52.857 70
Table no 9 shows that most students 52.857 % students were not agreed,
41.429% students were agreed and 5.714 % students undecided that they get bore
during group study or not.
56
4.1.10 Table 10: You believe that problem can solve more easily in group
study
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 50 3 17 70
Percentage 71.429 4.286 24.286 70
Table no 10 shows that most 71.429 % students were agreed, 4.286 %
students were not agreed and 4.286 % students undecided that they believe that
problem can solve more easily in group study or not.
57
4.1.11 Table 11: You believe that your skill set can improve more in group
studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 64 1 5 70
Percentage 91.429 1.429 7.143 70
Table no 11 shows that most 91.429 % students were agreed, 7.143 %
students were not agreed and 1.429 % students undecided that skill set can
improve more in group studies or not.
58
4.1.12 Table 12: You believe the consumption of time is less in a group
study is time saving.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 18 12 40 70
Percentage 25.714 17.143 57.143 70
Table no 12 shows that 25.714% students were agreed, 57.143 % students
were not agreed and 17.143% students undecided that group study is time saving
or not.
59
4.1.13 Table 13: You have the habit of make friends only those students
who are only good in studies.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 8 8 54 70
Percentage 11.429 11.429 77.143 70
Table no 13 shows that the most 77.143% students were not agreed, 11.429
% students were agreed and 11.429% students undecided that they have the habit
of make friends only those students who are good in studies
60
4.1.14 Table 14: You believe that interest in studies may develop more
on seeing your friend effort on studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 58 1 11 70
Percentage 82.857 1.429 15.714 70
Table no 14 shows that most 82.857% students were agreed, 15.714%
students were not agreed that interest may develop more on seeing friend efforts
on studies and 1.429% students undecided that interest may develop or not on
seeing friend effort on studies.
61
4.1.15 Table 15: You are more interested in knowing about your friend’s
completion of work in studies.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 60 4 6 70
Percentage 85.714 5.714 8.571 70
Table no 15 shows that most 85.741% students were agreed, 8.571 %
students were not agreed that they are more interested in knowing about their
friend’s completion of work in studies and 5.714% students undecided.
62
4.1.16 Table 16: You share your books, ideas and study material with
your friends.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 51 1 18 70
Percentage 72.857 1.429 25.714 70
Table no 16 shows that most 72.857% students were agreed, 25.714%
students were not agreed that they share books, ideas and study material with their
friends and 1.429% students undecided that they share ideas, books and materials or
not.
63
4.1.17 Table 17: You will help your friend incase if he/she is not good
in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 65 2 3 70
Percentage 92.857 2.857 4.286 70
Table no 17 shows that most 92.857% students were agreed, 4.286%
students were not agreed and 2.857% students were undecided that they will help
their friend incase if they were not good in studies.
64
4.1.18 Table 18: You will help your friend incase if you find your friend
finding difficulty in an examination.
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 56 5 9 70
Percentage 80 7.143 12.857 70
Table no 18 shows that most 80% students were agreed, 12.857% students
were not agreed and 7.143% students were undecided that they will help their friend
incase if they found friend finding difficulty in an examination.
65
4.1.19 Table 19: You will remain quite if you find your friend bunking
the class
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 40 1 29 70
Percentage 57.143 1.429 41.429 70
Table no 19 shows that most 57.143% students were agreed, 141.429%
students were not agreed that they will remain quite if found friend bunking the
class and 1.429 % students were undecided.
66
4.1.20 Table 20: You will forbid your friend incase if he/she bunks the class
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 46 3 21 70
Percentage 65.714 4.286 30 70
Table no 20 shows that most 65.714% students were agreed, 30 %students
were not agreed that they will forbid their friend incase if he/she bunks the class
and 4.286% students undecided that they will forbid their friend or not.
67
4.1.21 Table 21: You will warn your friends incase if her attitude is not
serious in class (laughing, playing, mischievous etc)
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 33 5 32 70
Percentage 47.143 7.143 45.714 70
Table no 21 shows that most 47.143% students were agreed, 45.714%
students were not agreed that they will warn their friends incase if their attitude is
not and 7.143% students are undecided.
68
Table 22: You believe that helping friends in exams by copying and
passing is good
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 21 6 43 70
Percentage 30 8.571 61.429 70
Table no 22 shows that 30% students were agreed, 61.429% students were
not agreed and 8.571% students undecided that helping friends in exams by
copying and passing is good.
69
4.1.22 Table 23: You feel proud if your friend tops the Rank in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 57 0 13 70
Percentage 81.429 0 18.571 70
Table no 23 shows that most 81.429% students were agreed, 571%
students were not agreed and 0% students were undecided that they feel proud if
their friend tops the rank in studies
70
4.1.23 Table 24: You will congratulate with heart your best friend who
tried her best to push you back in this exam
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 52 5 13 70
Percentage 74.286 7.143 18.571 70
Table no 24 shows that most 74.286% students were agreed, 18.571%
students were not agreed and 7.143% students are undecided that they will
congratulate with heart their best friend who tried their best to push you back in
this exam.
71
4.1.24 Table 25: You feel selfish and envy at your friend’s success in
studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 27 6 37 70
Percentage 38.571 8.571 52.857 70
Table no 25 shows that most 52.857% students were not agreed, 38.571%
students were agreed and 8.571% students undecided that they feel selfish and
envoy at their friend’s success in studies.
72
Table 26: You feel happy at your friend’s success in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 59 1 10 70
Percentage 84.286 1.429 14.286 70
Table no 26 shows that most 84.286% students were agreed, 14.286 %
students were not agreed studies and 1.429% students undecided that they feel
happy at their friend’s success.
73
Table 27: You want someone at your academic level to compete with you in
Class
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 43 7 20 70
Percentage 61.429 10 28.571 70
Table no 27 shows that most 61.429% students were agreed, 28.571%
students were not agreed and 10% students undecided that they want someone at
their academic level to compete them in Class.
74
4.1.25 Table 28: Competition among your friends affects your personal
relationship
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 27 5 38 70
Percentage 38.571 7.143 54.286 70
Table no 28 shows that most 54.286% students were not agreed, 38.571%
students were agreed and 7.143% students undecided that competition among friends
can affect personal relationships.
75
4.1.26 Table 29: You think friends can be a leg pusher in studies
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 29 8 33 70
Percentage 41.429 11.429 47.143 70
Table no 29 shows that most 47.143% students were not agreed, 41.429%
students were agreed and 11.429% students undecided that friends can be a leg
pusher in studies.
76
4.1.27 Table 30: You would like to be have a sole of KING in your
class
Agree Undecided Disagree Total
Responses 41 3 26 70
Percentage 58.571 4.286 37.143 70
Table no 30 shows that most 58.571% students were agreed, 37.143%
students were not agreed and 4.286% students undecided that they would like to be
have a sole of KING in their class.
77
Chapter V
Summary, Findings, Conclusion
&
Recommendations
78
Summary
The study was designed to measure the effects of peer group in their
Academic Achievement. In order to achieve the objectives of the study survey
method was employed.
For this study population consisted of Government Girls High School
Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi. A sample of 70 students was selected for the
study.
The data was collected through questionnaire. Questionnaire was distributed
personally from the students.
Data collected was analyzed and interpreted. Percentage was calculated for
this purpose.
79
Findings
Question no 1 shows that most 92.857% students were agreed and 1.429%
were not agreed that friendship plays a part in studies.
Question no 2 shows that most 54.286 % students were not agreed and
21.429% were agreed that friendship plays a key role in studies .
Question no 3 shows that most 81.429 % students give value and 14.286 %
students not give value to their friend’s suggestions.
Question no 4 shows that most 68.571% students were agreed and 22.857%
students were not agreed that group study is more effective.
Question no 5 shows that most 92.857 % students were agreed and 2.857 %
students were not agreed that group projects are more creative than individual
work.
Question no 6 shows that most 82.857 % students were agreed and 8.571 %
students were not agreed that they gossip more when they are in group study.
80
Question no 7 shows that most 80% students were agreed and 8.571%
students were not agreed that they generate more ideas in group study rather
than in individual study.
Question no 8 shows that most 65.714% students were agreed and 28.571%
students were not agreed that they think problem can solve more easily in
group study.
Question no 9 shows that most students 52.857 % students were not agreed
and 41.429% students were agreed that they get bore during group study
Question no 10 shows that most 71.429 % students were agreed and 4.286 %
students were not agreed that problem can solve more easily in group study.
Question no 11 shows that most 91.429 % students were agreed and 7.143 %
students were not agreed that skill set can improve more in group studies.
81
Question no 12 shows that 25.714% students were agreed and 57.143 %
students were not agreed that group study is time saving.
Question no 13 shows that the most 77.143% students were not agreed and
11.429 % students were agreed that they have the habit of make friends only
those students who are good in studies.
Question no 14 shows that most 82.857% students were agreed and 15.714%
students were not agreed that interest may develop more on seeing friend
efforts on studies.
Question no 15 shows that most 85.741% students were agreed and 8.571 %
students were not agreed that they are more interested in knowing about their
friend’s completion of work in studies.
Question no 16 shows that most 72.857% students were agreed and 25.714%
students were not agreed that they share books, ideas and study material with
their friends.
Question no 17 shows that most 92.857% students were agreed and 4.286%
students were not agreed that they will help their friend incase if they are not
good in studies.
82
Question no 18 shows that most 80% students were agreed and 12.857%
students were not agreed that they will help their friend incase if they found
friend finding difficulty in an examination.
Question no 19 shows that most 57.143% students were agreed and 141.429%
students were not agreed that they will remain quite if found friend bunking
the class .
Question no 20 shows that most 65.714% students were agreed and 30
%students were not agreed that they will forbid their friend incase if he/she
bunks the class.
Question no 21 shows that most 47.143% students were agreed and 45.714%
students were not agreed that they will warn their friends incase if their
attitude is not serious in class.
Question no 22 shows that (30%) students were agreed and 61.429% students
were not agreed that helping friends in exams by copying and passing is good.
Question no 23 shows that most 81.429% students were agreed and 571%
students were not agreed that they feel proud if their friend tops the rank in
studies.
83
Question no 24 shows that most 74.286% students were agreed and 18.571%
students were not agreed that they will congratulate with heart their best friend
who tried their best to push you back in this exam.
Question no 25 shows that most (52.857%) students were not agreed and
38.571% students were agreed that they feel selfish and envoy at their
friend’s success in studies.
Question no 26 shows that most (84.286%) students were agreed and 14.286 %
students were not agreed that they feel happy at their friend’s success in
studies
Question no 27 shows that most (61.429%) students were agreed and 28.571%
students were not agreed that they want someone at their academic level to
compete them in Class.
Question no 28 shows that most 54.286% students were not agreed and
38.571% students were agreed that competition among friends can affect
personal relationships.
Question no 29 shows that most 47.143% students were not agreed and
41.429% students were agree that friends can be a leg pusher in studies.
84
Question no 30 shows that most 58.571% students were agreed and 37.143%
students were not agreed that they would like to be have a sole of KING in
their class.
85
Conclusions:
1) The findings show that most of the respondents were agreed that friendship
plays a part in studies but they don’t believe that it plays a key role in
studies.
2) Based on findings, majority of the students give value to their friend’s
suggestions.
3) Majority of the respondents were agreed that group study is more effective
than individual study. Because group projects are more creative and it
generates more ideas. But they think that students gossip more in group
study.
4) The study has shown that most of the students were agreed that problem
can solve more easily in group study and they don’t get bore during group
study.
5) Most of the students were agreed that skill set can improve more in group
studies.
86
6) The findings show that most of the respondents were not agreed that the
consumption of time is less in a group study is time saving.
7) Based on findings, majority of the students don’t have the habit of make
friends only those students who are only good in studies.
8) Most of the students were agreed that interest in studies may develop
more on seeing your friend effort on studies and they take interest in
knowing about their friend’s completion of work in studies.
9) From the finding found that majority of the students share their books,
ideas and study material with their friends. They help their friend if their
friend find any difficulty in studies and examination.
10) Most of the students remain quite when their friend bunking the class but
sometimes students forbid their friend and also warn incase if their
friend’s attitude is not serious during class.
11) Majority of the students was disagreed that helping friends in exam by
copying and passing is good.
12) Most of the students congratulate with heart their best friend who
tried her best to push her back in exam.
87
13) From the finding found that majority of the students feel proud if their
friend tops the rank in studies. They don’t feel envoy and selfish at
their friend success in studies.
14) The study shown that the most of the students want someone compete them
at their academic level.
15) Majority of the students was disagreed that competition among their friends
affect their personal relationship.
16) The findings show that most of the respondents was disagreed that friends
can be a leg pusher in studies.
17) Based on findings, majority of the students like to have a sole king in
their class.
88
Recommendations
Based on the conclusion I recommend the following;
1) The student should choose the right peers in order to improve their
lifestyle, attitudes and so on. The student are encourage analyze the
attitudes of their friends before they become close. The positive peers can
influence them to be better person.
2) Student should choose the right peers. It is because the positive peer can
influenced and motivated them to be a good person
3) Teachers should arrange groups of students in class in such a way that it
should comprise of bright and dull students. In this way dull students will be
able to get benefit from the bright students and it will be add to their
academic acumen.
4) Parents should interact with their children with love, kindness, respect,
consistency, time, boundaries and encouragement. They should take interest
in their child’s activities. This allows parents to know their child’s friends
and to monitor behavior , which is crucial in keeping children out of
trouble.
89
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file:///F:/related%20literature%20of%20pper.htm
file:///F:/report%20writing/Peer%20Relations%20and%20Learning%20-%20Peer
%20Relationships,%20Learning%20Motivation%20and%20Relationships,
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http://www.eycb.coe.int/domino/links_05.html
file:///F:/zip%20of%20peers/Peer%20Effects%20–%20FREE%20Peer%20Effects
%20information%20_%20Encyclopedia.com_%20Find%20Peer%20Effects
%20research.html
96
http://www.buzzle.com/articles/negative-and-positive-effects-of-peer-
pressure.html
http://www.buzzle.com/chapters/home-and-lifestyle_friendships-and-familial-
relationships.asp
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6VB9-
4X315K3-
2&_user=10&_coverDate=08/25/2009&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_so
rt=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&
_userid=10&md5=1afaae4337afe88782d8be3ca854f28c
97
Appendixes
98
Permission Letter:
The Principal,
Govt Girls High School Khyaban-e-Sirsyed
Rawalpindi.
Subject: PERMISSION LETTER for the Administration of Research Questionnaire.
Dear Ma’am,
I have to conduct a study on the “Peer Group Effects on their Academic
Achievement”. This undertaking is part of the requirements for the completion of the
subject on Research Project.
The respondents of this study are the students of your school. I would like to give
the questionnaire to those who will be randomly chosen to be the respondents of the
research.
In connection with this, I would like to request your approval to allow me to
schedule the administration of the research.
Looking forward for your much needed approval on this request.
Sincerely,
Aneela Majeed
The researcher
Date___________ Signature___________
99
Covering Letter:
Dear……………,
I have the honor to request your participation in the study presently conducted by
the researcher in Govt Girls High School Khyaban-e-Sirsyed Rawalpindi.
The study wants to know the effects of your friendship on your academic
performance. Its respondents are the students of your school. Such study is a requirement
for the completion of the subject on Research Project.
I’m therefore requesting you to give this questionnaire your utmost attention. Rest
assured that your responses here will only be used for the study and therefore are
confidential from other persons not related in any way to the study.
Thank you very much.
Sincerely,
Aneela Majeed
The researcher
Date___________ Signature___________
100
Respondents List
Sr # Students Names Classes Age
1) Iqra Majeed 9th 14
2) Nadia Kousar 9th 14
3) Asma khan 9th 15
4) Sajda Ali 9th 14
5) Kainat Majeed 9th 15
6) Iqra ishaq 9th 14
7) Rida Bibi 9th 14
8) Rimsha Sabeen 9th 14
9) Maimona Ijaz 9th 15
10) Sidra Shezadi 9th 15
11) Meehreen 9th 14
12) Maria Parveen 9th 15
13) Fatima Batool 9th 15
14) Hira Naz 9th 15
15) Almas Mirza 9th 15
16) Saima Bibi 9th 14
101
17) Saira Saqeeq 9th 15
18) Sania Zareen 9th 15
19) Rida Asghar 9th 15
20) Habiba 9th 15
21) Ayesha Nazeer 9th 15
22) Saba Niaz 9th 14
23) Sitara Rafeeq 9th 15
24) Asma khan 9th 14
25) Lubna khan 9th 15
26) Aroosa Nasir 9th 17
27) Izat Begum 9th 16
28) Samra Noor 9th 16
29) Shaheen Bibi 9th 15
30) Quratulain 9th 15
31) Ayesha Binarus 9th 16
32) Arooj Ali 9th 14
33) Sana Gull 9th 14
34) Anum Ishaq 9th 14
35) Zaiba Banarus 9th 14
36) Amber Ali khan 9th 15
37) Hasiba Bibi 9th 14
38) Kiran khursheed 9th 14
102
39) Faiza Abbasi 9th 14
40) Murrium butt 9th 15
41) Sapna khan 10th 15
42) Sadaf Sayyab 10th 15
43) Ayesha Ghazal 10th 15
44) Seher khan 10th 15
45) Yusra Saurwar 10th 16
46) Saba Amjad 10th 16
47) Shaista Bibi 10th 16
48) Shabeera Bibi 10th 18
49) Kinza Ehsan 10th 15
50) Maria Ajmal 10th 16
51) Saima khan 10th 18
52) Ambreen Ayub 10th 15
53) Qalsoom Begum 10th 17
54) Mehrunisa 10th 17
55) Mehmoona Rafeeq 10th 17
56) Amina Waqar 10th 16
57) Saba Amjad 10th 16
58) Binesh Sadeeq 10th 16
59) Huma Parvez 10th 17
60) Khansa Tariq 10th 17
103
61) Hina kalsoom 10th 17
62) Maria Sheikh 10th 15
63) Ayesha Arshad 10th 15
64) Iram khan 10th 16
65) Murrium 10th 17
66) Amina Butt 10th 16
67) Ayesha Irshad 10th 16
68) Banish Naseer 10th 16
69) Madiha Saleem 10th 16
70) Fariha khanam 10th 15
104
Survey Questionnaire
Name: ______________ Class: _____________
Age: ______________ Date: _____________
Direction: Please put check () on the space that corresponds to what you are actually
doing, thinking, and feeling regarding the statement. Rest assured that your answers will
be treated in strictest and will be used only for this study.
Agree Undecided Disagree
S# Questions Agree Undecided Disagree
1. Friendship plays a part in studies
2. Friendship play a key role in studies
3. You give value to your friends suggestions
4. You feel that group study is more effective than individual study
5. Group projects are more creative than individual work
6. You Gossip more when you are in group study
7. You generate more ideas in group study rather than in individual study
105
8. You think problem can solve more easily in group study
9. You get bore during group study
10. You believe that problem can solve more easily in group study
11. You believe that your skill set can improve more in group studies
12. You believe the consumption of time is less in a group study is time saving
13. You have the habit of make friends only those students who are only good in studies
14. You believe that interest in studies may develop more on seeing your friend effort on studies
15. You are more Interested in knowing about your friends completion of work in studies
16. You share your books, ideas and study material with your friends.
17. You will help your friend incase if he/she is not good in studies
18. You will help your friend incase if you find your friend finding difficulty in an examination
19. You will remain quite if you find your friend bunking the class
20. You will forbid your friend incase if he/she bunks the class
21. You will warn your friends incase if her attitude is not serious in class (laughing, playing, mischievous etc)
22. You believe that helping friends in exams by copying and passing is good
23. You feel proud if your friend tops the Rank in studies
24. You will congratulate with heart your best friend who tried her best to push you back in this exam
25. You feel selfish and envy at your friend’s success in studies
26. You feel happy at your friend’s success in studies
106
27. You want someone at your academic level to compete with you in Class
28. Competition among your friends affect your personal relationship
29. You think friends can be a leg pusher in studies
30. You would like to be have a role of KING in your class