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Erik Erikson’s 8 Stages of Development
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Background Information
Born in 1902 near Germany First studied art & variety of languages To escape Nazi Germany, he came to the U.S. and became Boston’s first child analyst at Harvard.
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stages 1 and 2 Infancy- Trust vs. Mistrust (0-18 months)
Infants look to their primary caregiver. Success leads to virtue of hope, if not they develop a sense of mistrust. Early childhood- Autonomy vs. Shame(18 months- 3 years) Become more independent; success leads to virtue of will Parents should give more freedom Failure in this stage leads to feelings of shame and self doubt
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stages 3 and 4 Preschool Age- Initiative vs. Guilt (ages 3-5)
Children tend to become more independent Success leads to virtue of purpose, failure leads to feelings of guilt School Age- Industry vs. Inferiority (ages 6-11) Learning to read, write, doing things on their own Success in this stage will lead to the virtue of competence and confidence (if encouraged) Failure leads to feeling of inferiority
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stages 5 and 6 Adolescence- Identity vs. Identity Diffusion (ages 12-18) Success leads to virtue of true identity, failure leads to identity diffusion (not knowing who you are) Developing independently Young Adulthood- Intimacy vs. Isolation ( ages 19-40) Trying to seek love Success leads to virtue of intimacy, failing could lead to isolation (depression can follow)
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stages 7 and 8 Middle Adulthood- Generativity vs. Stagnation (ages 40-65) Settled down with children Success leads to virtue of generativity, failure leads to stagnation Giving back to society (moral compass) Maturity- Ego Integrity vs. Despair (ages 65+) Usually retired Success leads to virtue of ego integrity (had a full life), failure leads to feelings of depression and hopelessness (didn’t have a full life)
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