Title: ERIK ERIKSON
1ERIK ERIKSONS Stages of Development
2I. Stage 1- Infancy
- Birth to 1 ½ years
- Fastest growth period in life
- Developmental Tasks
- 1. learn to eat solid food
- 2. begin to walk
- 3. begin to talk
- 4. developing trust
- D. Trust vs. Mistrust
3II. Stage 2 - Early Childhood
- Ages 2-3
- Developmental tasks
- 1. walk and talk more
- 2. potty trained
- 3. social independence develops
- 4. Sense of autonomy-
- need to control impulses, body,
environment. - C. Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt
4III. Stage 3 - Childhood
- 4-5 years
- Developmental tasks
- 1. initiate play with other kids
- 2. make-believe
- 3. ask questions
- 4. Learn initiative- the ability to start
something on their own. - C. Initiative vs. Guilt
5IV. Stage 4 Late Childhood
- 6 to 11 years
- Developmental Tasks
- 1. learn physical skills for sports, games,
etc. - 2. intellectually- learn to read, write, do math
- 3. learn right from wrong
- 4. develop attitudes towards themselves and
others. - 5. develop sense of industry- make things-
cookies, models, etc. - C. Industry vs. Inferiority
6V. Stage 5 Puberty/Adolescence
- Ages 9 13 14-17
- Beginning of adolescence
- Become capable of reproducing
- Secondary sex characteristics begin to develop
- Second fastest period of growth
- Hormones develop- estrogen progesterone-girls
testosterone-boys -
7G. Developmental Tasks 1. Form mature
relationships 2. achieve a masculine or
feminine social role 3. accept ones physique
and use ones body effectively 4. Achieve
emotional independence from parents and other
adults 5. prepare for marriage and family life
6. prepare for career 7. acquire personal
standards 8. develop social intelligence-aware
of human needs-helping others 9. develop
conceptual and problem-solving skills
8VI. Stage 6- Young Adulthood
- Generally age 20 to early 30s- can start as
young as 17. - Financially independent from parents
- Can deal with everyday life trials with maturity
- At peak of physical abilities- strength,
quickness, alertness - Crucial life decisions made- marriage, career,
children - Intimacy vs. Isolation
9VII. Stage 7- Middle Adulthood
- 35-65 years
- Start thinking in terms of what to do with the
rest of their lives. - Feeling that time is running out
- Start to face death of parents
- Mid-life crisis common- divorce, career change,
remarriage - 1. some have not accepted middle age- can
lead to problems adjusting - 2. Their children may be going through
adolescence, during this time which can add to
conflict.
10VIII. Stage 8- Late Adulthood
- 65 and older
- Retirement common
- Senior citizen does not equate to old anymore.
- Longer life expectancy- 85 and older common.
- Better health practices than in the past.
- Measures of Age
- 1. Chronological- How old you actually are
- 2. Biological- how well your body is
holding up - influenced by diet, exercise,
lifestyle, heredity - 3. Social- a persons lifestyle
- G. Grandchildren become important
- H. Must face death
11IX. Death- Stages of Acceptance
- 1. Denial- No not me- cant accept news of a
death or their own imminent death. - 2. Anger- Why me? Stage-resentment, sometimes
leads to isolation, rejection - 3. Bargaining- begins to accept reality, but
bargains for more time by praying, other medical
treatments, etc. - 4. Depression-time of grieving for what the
patient has already lost and will lose. Worries
about family, money, fells sense of great
loss.-Encourage him or her to grieve - 5. Acceptance Allows for action and facing
reality in a constructive way. Closure is
important. Not a happy stage, but not helpless
either.