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What is Adolescence?
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Adolescence The period between childhood and adulthood
From puberty (the start of sexual maturation) to independence from parents
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Physical Development in Adolescence
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Puberty The period of sexual maturation where the person becomes capable of reproducing Starts at approximately age 11 in females and age 13 in males Major growth spurt
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Physical Development
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Primary Sex Characteristics
The body structures that make sexual reproduction possible Ovaries in females Testes in males
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Secondary Sex Characteristics
Nonreproductive sexual characteristics Breasts and hips in females Facial hair and voice changes in males
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Sexual Characteristics
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Sexual Orientation One’s attraction toward people of a particular gender Usually heterosexual or homosexual; small minority bisexual
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Heterosexual A sexual orientation in which a person is attracted to members of the opposite sex “straight”
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Homosexual A sexual orientation in which a person is attracted to members of the same sex Approximately 6-8% of the male population and 3-4% of the female population
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Social Development in Adolescence
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Each stage has its own psychosocial, developmental task a “crisis”.
Erik Erikson Constructed an 8-stage theory of social development Each stage has its own psychosocial, developmental task a “crisis”.
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Trust v. mistrust Infancy to 1 year
If needs meet infant develops a sense of basic trust, or will develop mistrust
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Autonomy v. shame and doubt
1 to 2 years Learn to exercise and do things for self or they will doubt their abilities
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Initiative v. guilt 3 to 5 Learn to initiate tasks and carry out plans or they feel guilty about efforts to be independent
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Competence (industry) v. inferiority
6 years to puberty Learn pressure of applying themselves to a tasks, or they feel guilty
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Identity v. role confusion
Teens into 20s Refining sense of self by testing roles – challenging authority eventually find SELF or become confused about who they are
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Intimacy v. isolation 20s to 40s Forming close relationships
Deeper love or socially isolated
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Generativity v. stagnation
40s to 60s discover sense of contributing to the world or they may feel lack of purpose
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Ego integrity v. despair
60 and up Reflecting on life either feel satisfied or failure
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Social Development in Adolescence: Developing Identity
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Identity A strong, consistent sense of who and what a person is, search through: Experimentation Rebellion “Self”-ishness Optimism and energy
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Intimacy A close, sharing, emotional, and honest relationship with other people (primary task of early adulthood) Not necessarily one’s spouse or a sexual relationship
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Adulthood How easily one passes between stages depends on cultural and economic factors Erickson showed that development is an ongoing process that is never finished
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Are Adults Prisoners of Childhood?
Traumatized children are more likely to have emotional and behavioral problems Evidence from the following suggest that negative effects are not inevitable
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Partnerships formed Parenthood Work (double shift) Midlife crisis/transition
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Menopause Retirement Change in relationships- empty nest, death of family & friends
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