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Smoking out 'dirts' and 'hotshots.' (psychological study on smoking associated with a Wisconsin junior high school students)


Smoking out 'dirts' and 'hotshots'

If you want to prevent and reduce cigarette smoking among junior high school students, say two psychologists at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, target the "dirts" and the "hotshots." These unflattering labels refer to adolescent ad·o·les·cent
adj.
Of, relating to, or undergoing adolescence.

n.
A young person who has undergone puberty but who has not reached full maturity; a teenager.
 peer groups with a surfeit sur·feit  
v. sur·feit·ed, sur·feit·ing, sur·feits

v.tr.
To feed or supply to excess, satiety, or disgust.

v.intr. Archaic
To overindulge.

n.
1.
a.
 of smokers.

Peter Mosbach and Howard Leventhal directed interviews of 341 seventh- and eighth-graders in a rural community. The students identified four peer groups at school. "Dirtballs" or "freaks Freaks

1930s macabre movie about sideshow people. [Am. Cinema: Halliwell, 278]

See : Deformity
" (shortened short·en  
v. short·ened, short·en·ing, short·ens

v.tr.
1. To make short or shorter.

2.
 to "dirts" by the researchers) were mainly boys who smoked, used other drugs, were poor students and engaged in a variety of problem behaviors. "Hotshots" were popular and academically successful, "jocks" had a strong interest in organized sports, and "regulars" were described as not belonging to any group and typical of junior-high students. These categories closely match those recently identified by other researchers in a big-city junior high school.

Dirts and hotshots made up 15 percent of the sample but accounted for 56 percent of the smokers, report Mosbach and Leventhal in the May JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY Journal of Abnormal Psychology is a scientific journal published by the American Psychological Association. It has previously been entitled Journal of Abnormal & Social Psychology

   
. Smoking is one of several behaviors, that attract dirts to one another and helps satisfy a need for risk-taking and excitement, say the researchers. Dirts usually begin smoking before junior high, and are relatively self-confident and unconcerned about smoking's health dangers. Hotshots, on the other hand, are mainly females who seek excitement and achievement but are uncertain of their acceptance by others. Social pressures at school are likely to generate smoking among hotshots, who nevertheless believe that smoking is harmful.

Smoking prevention programs, as well as research into new antismoking an·ti·smok·ing  
adj.
Opposed to or prohibiting the smoking of tobacco, especially in public: an antismoking campaign; an antismoking ordinance. 
 strategies in the schools, should focus on dirts and hotshots, assert Mosbach and Leventhal.
COPYRIGHT 1988 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1988, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Science News
Date:Jun 11, 1988
Words:278
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