Brandyn is a 9 year old boy and has problems with her behavior at home and at school. He will be angry when his teacher condemns cheating in his class and his classmates. He is bullying other children, and he does not seem to be offended if he is punished for inappropriate behavior. Brandyn lives in a single parent; his mother worked for a long time to serve them, and she also says her son is acting unhappy at home. She is worried that he is progressing his father's path.
TV violence is also the cause of violence and attacks among teenage boys. According to evidence from research by Turner, Hesse, and Peterson-Lewis, we can conclude that the aggressiveness of boys watching television violence increases in the long term (Hoff 1). In addition to this study, Dr. William A. Belson also rated 1,500 boys from 13 to 16 years of age. He thinks that boys exposed to television dramas are more likely to act violently than other boys (Langone 51). In Belson's study, the influence of each violent behavior on the television was found to be collective, as time passed, Belson saw that boys had many paintings of graffiti, window breaks, aggressive fun We participated in extreme behavior of Curse and threaten other boys. Violence (Kinnear 26)
James Garbarino, a professor at Loyola University in Chicago, has been studying violence against children and adolescents for over 30 years. As society changed, he shifted the focus from boys to girls and their aggressive behavior. After he saw Jane Jane Hit: Garbarino discusses how pop culture celebrate aggressive girls, so that girls become more violent and able to do something. He examined whether boys and girls have different relationships on aggression and checked suicide or other girls. Gender-based violence in schools around the world edited by Fiona Leach and Claudia Mitchell, and gender-based violence in schools around the world. Various fields, including developing countries, are investigating such violence from an international perspective. Case studies focus on North America, UK, Russia, Pakistan, Nepal; they include corporal punishment as sexuality