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Adulthood and Aging

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Title: Adulthood and Aging


1
Adulthood and Aging
2
Social Development
3
Adulthood
  • Play Stages of Adult Development (307) Segment
    23 from Psychology The Human Experience.

4
Emerging Adulthood
  • Developmental period between adolescence and
    adulthood

5
Social Clock
  • The culturally (societys) preferred timing of
    social events such as marriage, parenthood, and
    retirement
  • The best timing for certain life events
  • The timing varies from culture to culture.

6
Social Development
  • Erik Erikson described two fundamental themes
    that dominate adulthood love and work
  • According to Erikson, the primary psychosocial
    task of early adulthood is to form a committed,
    mutually enhancing, intimate relationship with
    another person.
  • During middle adulthood, the primary psychosocial
    task becomes one of generativity, to contribute
    to future generations through your children, your
    career, and other meaningful activities.

7
Adult Friendships
  • Female friends tend to confide in one another
    about their feelings, problems, and interpersonal
    relationships
  • Male friends typically minimize discussions about
    relationships or personal feelings or problems
    instead, male friends tend to do things together
    that they find mutually interesting, such as
    activities related to sports or hobbies

8
Marriage Family
  • Today, many young adults postpone marriage so
    they can finish their education and establish a
    career
  • As a general rule, we tend to be attracted to and
    marry people who are similar to us on a variety
    of dimensions, including physical attractiveness,
    social and educational status, ethnic background,
    attitudes, values, and beliefs
  • Marital satisfaction tends to decline after the
    birth of the first child and rise again after
    children leave home
  • Becoming a parent at an older age and waiting
    longer after marriage to start a family helps
    ease the adjustment to parenthood.

9
Careers in Adulthood
  • Researchers have found that close to a third of
    people in their late twenties and early thirties
    do not just change jobs within a particular
    field they completely switch occupational fields
  • Dual-career families have become increasingly
    common
  • Although many fathers are actively involved in
    child rearing, women still tend to have primary
    responsibility for child care
  • Multiple roles seem to provide both men and women
    with a greater potential for increased feelings
    of self-esteem, happiness, and competence.
  • The critical factor is not the number of roles
    that people take on but the quality of their
    experiences on the job, in the marriage, and as a
    parent.

10
Social Changes and Lifes Commitments
11
Erik Erikson
  • Constructed an 8-stage theory of social
    development
  • Each stage has its own psychosocial developmental
    task.
  • The last 4 stages deal with Adolescence through
    late adulthood.

12
(No Transcript)
13
Generativity
  • Eriksons term for being productive and
    supporting future generations

14
Commitment to Work
  • Most high school/college students arent sure of
    their career goals.
  • Happiness seems to be correlated with work that
    is challenging, provides a sense of
    accomplishment, and is interesting.

15
Commitment to Love
  • An important factor in adult happiness
  • Lasting love includes
  • Intimate self-disclosure
  • Shared emotional and material support
  • Similar interests and values

16
Commitment to Marriage
  • 90 of the population gets married
  • 50 divorce rate
  • 75 of those who have divorced remarry

17
Commitment to Children
  • Children result in a change in the marital
    relationship
  • Potential disagreement on the division of labor
    with children

18
Empty Nest
  • The change married couples go through as a result
    of their children leaving home
  • Not necessarily a negative event for couples

19
Physical Changes of Middle Adulthood
20
Adult Physical Development
  • Genetics and lifestyle combine to determine
    course of physical changes
  • Your unique genetic blueprint greatly influences
    the unfolding of certain physical changes during
    adulthood. Such changes vary significantly from
    one person to another.
  • Staying mentally and physically active and eating
    a proper diet can both slow and minimize the
    degree of physical decline associated with aging.

21
Typical Physical Progression
  • Physical strength typically peaks in early
    adulthood, the twenties and thirties
  • By middle adulthood, roughly from the forties to
    midsixties, physical strength and endurance
    gradually decline
  • During late adulthood, from the mid-sixties on,
    physical stamina and reaction time tend to
    decline further and faster
  • Aging and its effects on vision (NBC Report 2
    min.)

22
Menopause
  • The time of natural cessation of menstruation
  • Referred to as the biological changes a woman
    experiences as her ability to reproduce declines
  • Usually occurs between age 45 and 55
  • Does not usually lead to depression

23
Later Adulthoods Physical Changes
24
Late Adulthood
  • Old age as a time of poor health, inactivity, and
    decline is a myth.
  • Activity theory of aginglife satisfaction is
    highest when people maintain level of activity
    they had in earlier years. See NBC Report (1 ½
    min.)
  • The average life expectancy for men is about 74
    years for women, it is about 79 years.
  • The majority of older adults live healthy,
    active, and self-sufficient lives. Only 4.5
    percent of those age 65 and over live in nursing
    homes. After 85, it is 20 percent.

25
Physical Changes Vision
26
Physical Changes Sense of Smell
27
Physical Changes Hearing
28
Physical Changes Hearing
29
Diseases Related to Aging
30
Alzheimers Disease
  • A progressive and irreversible brain disorder
    characterized by gradual deterioration of memory,
    reasoning, language, and physical functioning

31
Alzheimers Disease
  • Play Alzheimers Disease (706) Module 19 from
    The Brain Teaching Modules (2nd edition).

32
Alzheimers Disease
  • Play Understanding Alzheimers Disease (1140)
    Segment 19 from The Mind Psychology Teaching
    Modules (2nd edition).

33
Senile Dementia
  • The mental disintegration that accompanies
    alcoholism, tumor, stroke, aging, or Alzheimer's
    disease

34
Senile Dementia
35
Parkinsons Disease
  • Play Brain Transplants in Parkinsons Patients
    (1109) Module 31 from The Brain Teaching
    Modules (2nd edition).

36
Cognitive Changes and Memory
37
Aging and Memory
38
Cognitive Changes and Transitions Intelligence
39
Intellectual Ablities
  • Psychologist K. Warner Schaie and his colleagues
    have found that general intellectual abilities
    gradually increase until ones early forties,
    then become relatively stable until about age 60,
    when a small but steadily increasing percentage
    of older adults experience slight declines on
    tests of general intellectual abilities.
  • Schaie found that those who were better educated
    and engaged in physical and mental activities
    throughout older adulthood showed the smallest
    declines in mental abilities.

40
Fluid Intelligence
  • Ones ability to reason speedily and abstractly
  • Can be used to solve novel logic problems
  • Declines as people get older

41
Crystallized Intelligence
  • Ones accumulated knowledge and verbal skills
  • Tends to increase with age

42
Age and Verbal/Nonverbal Intelligence
43
Memory and Aging
  • Play Aging and Memory (1116) Segment 17 from
    The Mind Psychology Teaching Modules (2nd
    edition).

44
A Lifetime of Well-Being
45
Overall Life Satisfaction
  • Most studies show the elderly as happy and
    satisfied with life.
  • People tend to mellow with age.
  • Most regrets focus on what the person didnt do
    rather than mistakes they have made in life.

46
Overall Life Satisfaction
47
Death and Dying
48
Death and Dying
  • In general, anxiety about dying tends to peak in
    middle adulthood, then to decrease in late
    adulthood
  • Kubler-Ross stages of dying
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargain
  • Depression
  • Acceptance
  • Not universally demonstrated
  • Dying is as individual a process as is living.
  • People cope with the prospect of dying much as
    they have coped with other stresses involved in
    living

49
Reactions to Death
  • Reactions to death are different from culture to
    culture.
  • Attitudes toward death and dying are changing in
    the United States. --more
    openness
    --facing death with dignity hospice helps
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