Neutral Peer Pressure is when the affects have no consiquences. they dont harm your nor help you.
it means to force someone to do something
They're 5 Kinds of Peer Pressure These are it ~ Negative Peer Pressure , Positive Peer Pressure , Heavy Peer Pressure , Indirect Peer Pressure , and Friendly Peer Pressure
there is positive peer pressure friendly peer pressure indirect/dempting teasing heavy peer pressure/bullying
Friendly peer pressure is pressure to do something that comes from a friend. It could be a friend wanting you to take a drink, smoke a cigarette, or stay out late.
friendly,teasing, heavy bullying, indirect.and positive
There are acutally 3 types of peer pressure:Direct Peer PressureUnspoken Indirect Peer PressurePositive Peer PressureActually, there are two:NegativePositveNegative has many different sub-types such as:See Numbers 1 & 2 in the above answer (above the line)Positive has the same as Negative.
There are five different kinds: positive, negative, friendly, heavy, indirect
There are five different kinds: positive, negative, friendly, heavy, indirect
Yes, teasing is a peer pressure it is a negative peer pressure...
Drug peer pressure, peer pressure related with alcohol, sexual peer pressure, and even peer pressure to break the law, are some of the most typical ones.
It Depends on the type of peer pressure; It it is negative peer pressure then yes but if it is positive peer pressure and your not under age then no.
Peer pressure refers to the influence that peers can have on an individual to conform to their behavior or attitudes. Peer influence, on the other hand, is a broader concept that includes both positive and negative impacts that peers can have on an individual's behavior or decisions. So while peer pressure is a type of peer influence, not all peer influence involves pressure to conform.
Peer pressure can take on different forms such as direct pressure, indirect pressure (like influencing behaviors through actions or comments), individual pressure (when a person feels the need to conform to a group), and self-imposed pressure (setting personal standards based on what one perceives to be expected by peers).