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This is an archive article published on April 6, 2008

Mean girls ‘are most popular’

If you think that indulging in gossip, spreading vicious rumours and keeping others away from your exclusive clique of friends may make you a social pariah, you are absolutely wrong.

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If you think that indulging in gossip, spreading vicious rumours and keeping others away from your exclusive clique of friends may make you a social pariah, you are absolutely wrong.

A new study has found that mean girls are the most popular particularly in schools, despite making life miserable for some of their other mates.

“A lot of popular kids may not be well liked, but they are relationally aggressive and their peers think that they’re popular,” lead researcher Prof Casey Borch was quoted by ‘The Sunday Telegraph’ as saying.

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In fact, according to Prof Borch of the University of Alabama, girls are more likely to use this bullying behaviour than boys in schools as they think that being nasty can boost their “social visibility”.

In their study, the researchers surveyed more than 600 boys and girls, aged between nine and 18. The respondents were asked to rate their school’s cliques on popularity.

They found that bullying and physical aggression in the school helped in gaining popularity in the earlier grades but membership in physically aggressive cliques declined as the children got older.

However, membership in groups where students gossipped, spread nasty rumours and excluded others remained constant and even increased the perceived popularity and social visibility of the students in cliques.

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Prof Borch said that “the mean girls’ effect” suggested girls behaved in that way more than boys and it may remain unchecked until they “leave school”.

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