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Title: Adolescence Chapter 4


1
AdolescenceChapter 4
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(No Transcript)
3
Adolescence
  • Transition between childhood and adulthood
  • Psychological terms
  • Time period of mixed abilities and
    responsibilities in which childlike behavior
    changes to adult like behavior
  • Initiation Rites
  • Ceremonies or rituals in which an individual is
    admitted to new status or accepted into a new
    position
  • 16, 18, 21 graduations, bar mitzvahs

4
Theories of adolscence
  • Margret Mead
  • Adolescence is a highly enjoyable time and not
    marked by storm and stress
  • Culture plays an important role in development
  • G. Stanley Hall
  • Adolescence as representing a transitional stage
  • Animal in a cage-sees freedom but does not know
    when or how to handle it
  • Confused, troubled and highly frustrated

5
Theories continued
  • Factors that determine adjustment
  • Varies between individuals
  • Adjustment in childhood
  • Adjustment of parents and peers
  • And the changes that occur
  • 1988 report
  • 11 percent have serious difficulties
  • 32 percent have sporadic problems
  • 57 enjoy positive times
  • Do you think this changed since 1988?

6
Theories Continued
  • Robert Havighurst
  • Every adolescent faces challenges in the form of
    developmental tasks that must be mastered
  • Accepting ones physical makeup and acquiring
    gender role
  • Developing appropriate relations with peers
  • Becoming emotionally independent or parents
  • Assurance that they will become economically
    independent
  • Deciding/entering a profession
  • Developing cognitive skills for social competence
  • Understanding/achieving socially responsible
    behavior
  • Preparing for marriage and family
  • Acquiring values

7
Physical Development
  • Puberty
  • Sexual maturation
  • Girls between 8-10
  • Boys 9-16
  • Growth spurts

8
Reactions to Growth
  • Self consciousness
  • Research-boys who develop earlyadvantage
  • Effects felt into their 30s
  • Research girls who develop earlydisadvantage
  • Psychological reactions to physical growth may be
    result of a self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Boy who believes he does not meet cultures
    physical ideal may think less of himself

9
Sexual Development
  • Sexual attitudes
  • Cultural variations
  • Change in sexual attitudes
  • The Youth Risk behavior Surveillance report
  • 1 million pregnancies occur/year w/ adolescence
  • 3 million cases of STDs
  • Rates falling since 1991 but still an issue

10
What impacts behaviors
  • Children of teenage mothers
  • Fear of STDs/AIDS

11
Personal Development
  • Cognitive Development
  • Formal operations
  • More abstract thinking-hypothetical, ethical,
    conformity
  • Problem solving
  • Rationalization
  • A process when individuals seek to explain an
    often unpleasant emotion or behavior in a way
    that will preserve his/her self-esteem
  • again, variations from individual to
    individual, social, economic classes

12
Personal Devlopment Cont.
  • Idealism-just quit
  • Some problems with adolescent development as a
    result of Immaturity
  • Argumentativeness
  • Finding fault with authority figures-fault-everyon
    e know
  • Indecisiveness
  • Apparent hypocrisy
  • Self-consciousness
  • Invulnerability-risk taking, self-destructive
    behaviors-not subject to same rules

13
Moral Development
  • Kohlberg
  • Moral reasoning develops in stages
  • To see situations from another's view point
  • What effects moral development?
  • Relationships with parents
  • Significant others
  • After high school is when most moral development
    occurs WHY?

14
Identity Development
  • Erik Erikson
  • Establishment of identity is key to development
  • Theory of Identity Crisis
  • Children live in future-adolescents think about
    future
  • Identity Crisis
  • A time of inner conflict during which adolescents
    worry about who they are
  • Physiological changes
  • Cognitive developments
  • Sexual development

15
Erikson ContinuedWHO AM I
  • See the future as a reality
  • Inner conflict
  • Desire to feel unique vs. to fit in (must resolve
    this in order to achieve a sense of self)
  • Identity forms when Issues regarding job, values,
    sexual identity
  • Role confusionchaos, a child like behaviors

16
James Marcia
  • Supports Erikson and identity crisis
  • Individuals must make a decision on
    issues(politics, religion, job)
  • 4 attempts to achieve a sense of identity
  • Identity moratorium adolescents
  • Seriously considering issues but not made a
    commitment
  • Identity foreclosure adolescents
  • Have made a firm commitment on issue but not on
    their own choice but suggestions of others
  • Identity confused or diffused adolescents
  • Not given any thought to making a decision, no
    sense of identity
  • Identity achievement adolescents
  • Who considered may possibilities and have
    committed themselves

17
Social Learning View
  • AC Peterson
  • Crisis not a normal for adolescents
  • Change in external circumstances-divorce
  • Albert Bandura
  • Social Learning Theory
  • Develop due to interaction with others

18
Social Development
  • Role of Peers
  • Peers groups
  • Hierarchy-who is in what group, what do they do?
  • Early in adolescence divided by gender but become
    co-ed
  • Form along class lines
  • Teach how to act in the world (good neighborhood)
  • Role of family
  • Becoming independent of families
  • Mixed feelings on both sides

19
Peer groups continued
  • What forms peer groups?
  • Personal characteristics looks, personality,
    athletic ability)
  • Clique-small, exclusive group of people within a
    larger group
  • Functions
  • Fulfills need for closeness
  • Define self (self confidence, independence)
  • Down sides
  • Conformity-acting in accordance with some
    specified authority
  • both parents and peers influence

20
Difficulties during adolescence
  • Rates of depression, mental illness, suicide
    increasing-WHY?
  • Invulnerability
  • Running away, pregnancy, drugs, underachievement
  • Juveniles-17 of all violent crimes
  • 35 of all property crimes

21
Depression and Suicide
  • What causes depression in adolescents?
  • Loss of a loved one
  • Separation or divorce
  • What does depression look it in adolescents?
  • Anger, rebellious behaviors, hyperactive
  • Change in intensity/frequency of rebellious
    behaviors
  • Withdrawal from friends
  • Talking about suicide

22
Eating Disorder
  • Anorexia nervosa
  • Refusing to eat and not maintaining weight-fear
    of gaining weight
  • Distorted body image
  • Refusal to grow up? Control?
  • bulimia nervosa
  • Binge eating followed by purging
  • Laxatives, fasting, dieting to eliminate calories
    during binge
  • Females more likely to develop
  • Do not get the calories or nutrition they need to
    grow
  • Treatment-therapy, anti-depressants

23
Gender Roles and Differencesboys will be boys
  • Girls dressed in Pink and boys in blue
  • Gender specific names
  • Act differently
  • Nature vs. nurture?

24
Gender Roles
  • Gender identity
  • The sex group (masculine or feminine) to which an
    individual belongs to biologically
  • Awareness of being male or female
  • Between 2-3
  • By 5 learned expectations, behaviors
  • Gender role
  • Set of behaviors that society considers
    appropriate for each sex
  • Genetic but mostly by society and culture
  • U.S.men dominate, aggressive, competitive
  • Can change over time and from societies

25
Gender roles continued
  • Gender stereotypes
  • Oversimplified or distorted generalization about
    characteristics or men/women
  • Historically division of labor
  • Some argue should be androgynous
  • Combining or blending traditionally male/female
    characteristics
  • Bem Sex Role Inventory
  • 50 percent traditional
  • 15 percent cross-sexed typed
  • 36 percent androgynous

26
gender differences
  • Personality
  • Males more confident (math, science)
  • Females more verbal aggression, males more
    physical
  • Society encourages male aggression
  • Men lower levels of serotonin
  • Communication
  • men talk more and interrupt more
  • Females talk more when they have power
  • Women use hedges-you know Kind of
  • Women also use disclaimers-I may be wrong
  • Women use more tag questions- Okay?

27
Cognitive Abilities
  • No measurable difference between sexes in math
    and verbal skills
  • Problem solving skills improve for men in H.S
  • Men do better on spatial reasoning
  • Women better at tracking objects

28
Origins of Gender Differences
  • Biological theory of gender-anatomy, hormones
  • Historically
  • Psychoanalytic theory-Freud
  • Child identifies with parents of same sex, gender
    identity results
  • Social Learning theory
  • Social and cognitive processes-modeling
  • Praise girl for cleaning
  • Cognitive Developmental theory
  • Interacting with environment and thinking about
    experiences
  • Learn standards for male/female behaviors
  • Gender schemas-set of behaviors organized around
    how either a male or female should think/behave

29
Changing Gender Roles
  • Women in work force
  • Age of marriage

30
  • -Monday-review
  • Tuesdsay-test
  • Wednesday-pp-what is it like to be teenager?
  • Thursday-
  • Friday
  • Video children at play-aggression
  • Bem sex role inventory
  • 20/20 eating disorders
  • Bullying-
  • Video boys playing with dolls
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