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Published byPhillip Grant Modified over 9 years ago
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Historically viewed as a time of stress Rebelliousness, emotional upheaval In reality: No greater psychological problems than in adulthood But… its true that there is More depression, eating disorders, substance abuse, and suicide than in childhood
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Emotional moodiness does increase Linked to negative events More moody that children or adults Teens are happiest with friends Least happy in adult structured events Moods level off by 10th grade
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Growth Spurts Females: Starts by age 10 Ends by age 16 Males: Starts by 12.5 Ends by 17.5
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Lasts from 7 to 11 years of age Characterized by slow physical growth Important cognitive changes occur Conservation and reversibility ▪ Child decenters – allows conservation problems to be solved; learns some matter changes shape but not volume
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Emotional and social development Child enters with close ties to parents Peer relationships become increasingly important ▪ Friendships more important, last longer ▪ Cliques or groups formed, mostly same sex ▪ Terms boyfriend and girlfriend have little meaning at this stage
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Adolescence Physical changes of puberty Adolescent growth spurt Heightened sexual and romantic interest Peers become more important than parents Cognitively – capable of abstract reasoning ▪ Ponders abstract issues like justice or equality No clear cut end to adolescence in society
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Cognitive development Formal operations stage entered ▪ Ability to use abstract concepts ▪ Shift to stage varies among individuals; some never reach this stage, others reach it in early adulthood Piaget’s classic experiment with weights
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CD AB 7-yr-old4-yr-old 10 kg 5 kg 8 kg 5 kg 2 kg 5 kg 14-yr-old 10-yr-old Piaget’s Balance Test - task: make the weight times the distance equal on both sides of center
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Adolescent egocentrism Imaginary audience – everyone is watching Personal fable – belief that s/he is unique Hypocrisy – okay for one to do it but not another Pseudostupidity – use of oversimplified logic Social development Time of drifting or breaking away from family
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Emotional development G. Stanley Hall – time of storm and stress Most adolescents are happy, well-adjusted Areas of problems ▪ Parent-child conflicts ▪ Mood changes - self-conscious, awkward, lonely, ignored ▪ Risky behavior - aggression, unprotected sex, suicide, use of substances or alcohol
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Young adulthood through older adulthood Developmental changes continue throughout adulthood: not a single phase of life Taking on adult responsibilities in work and social relationships Challenges: love, work, play continue changing
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Physical development Growth and strength in early adulthood, then slow process of decline afterwards ▪ Speed and endurance ▪ Vision and ability to see in weak lighting ▪ Hearing and detection of tones ▪ Taste – intact until later in life; men tend to lose hearing and taste earlier than women Decline affected by health and lifestyles
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Cognitive development Continues throughout adulthood; some abilities improve while others decline ▪ Fluid intelligence peaks in 20s, declines therafter ▪ Crystallized intelligence improves until 30s; then declines slowly afterwards ▪ Overall, individual rates vary depending on lifestyle and health
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Emotional and social development Many aspects of personality are fairly stable over time, and changes are predictable ▪ On average, adults become ▪ less anxious and emotional, socially outgoing, and creative ▪ People become more dependable, agreeable, and accepting of life’s hardships ▪ Gender differences lessen over time
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Emotional and social development Much disagreement about when and how changes occur during aging – differences between stages of infant/child development and adult development ▪ Not all adults go through every stage ▪ Order of stages can vary for individuals ▪ Timing of stages not controlled by biological maturation
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Early adulthood Erikson ▪ Intimacy versus isolation (17 to 45 years) Levinson - Early adulthood has three stages ▪ Entry into early adulthood (17-28) ▪ Age 30 transition (28-33) ▪ Culmination of early adulthood (to age 40) Challenges of career, marriage, and parenthood
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Erikson – Generativity versus stagnation (40-65 years) ▪ Taking stock of what one has, who s/he is ▪ Some are happy, some are disappointed ▪ Generativity – reaching out, not self-centered
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Levinson – four brief stages Midlife transition (early 40s) Entry to middle adulthood stage (45 to 50) Age 50 transition Culmination of middle adulthood Climactic – Female sexual ability to reproduce declines Not all adult development timed by social clock rather than biological clock
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Levinson – four brief stages Midlife transition (early 40s) Entry to middle adulthood stage (45 to 50) Age 50 transition Culmination of middle adulthood Climactic – Female sexual ability to reproduce declines Not all adult development timed by social clock rather than biological clock
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Biological – human body deteriorates Psychological Happy or unhappy aging Social activity and slowed intellectual decline or disengagement and isolation Maintain healthy or unhealthy lifestyle Optimism linked to happier, healthier, longer life
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Kübler-Ross – five stages Denial Anger Bargaining Depression Acceptance
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