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Published byCornelius Wade Modified over 9 years ago
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Physical, cognitive, and social/emotional changes between childhood and adulthood
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Physical process of obtaining sexual maturation and reproductive capabilities Before puberty During/after puberty
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Primary › Females – release first egg = 1 st period or menarche › Males – 1 st ejaculation Secondary – external characteristics not directly involved in reproduction › Body hair › Breasts (female) › Muscle gain (male)
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Early bloomer males = increased self confidence Early bloomer females = decreased self confidence and esteem › More likely to experiment with drugs, alcohol, and sex Why is there a gender difference?
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How an individual sees right and wrong › Involves abstract thinking and principles Lawrence Kohlberg asked boys of different ages to respond to scenarios
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Found that boys of similar age groups had similar reasoning 3 major levels An example of Kohlberg’s dilemmas http://www.haverford.edu/psych/ddavis/p109g/kohlberg.dilemmas.ht ml
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Morality based on self interest › Possibility of rewards and / punishment › Baby morality? http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id= 50135408n
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Emphasizes social rules, peer approval, obligations
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Reasoning involves your own set of legal and moral principles that apply to all › Argued that many never reach this stage
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Most humans will not be in one stage in every situation. Gender differences? › Carol Gilligan found that girls are situational where boys are absolute. › Girls may get to postconventional earlier › Cultural differences? Individualist vs Collectivist societies
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Pages 121-127
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Secure base changes: Parents (childhood) → peers (adolescence) → partners (adulthood)
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AgeImportant Event Description Birth - 18 months FeedingInfants form a loving, trusting relationship with parents; they also learn to mistrust others.
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AgeImportant Event Description 18 months - 3 Years Toilet Training Child's energies are directed toward physical skills: walking, grasping, and toilet training. The child learns control along with a healthy dose of shame and doubt.
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AgeImportant Event Description 3 - 6 YearsIndependenceChild becomes more assertive, takes more initiative, becomes more forceful.
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AgeImportant Event Description 6 - 12 YearsSchoolThe child must deal with demands to learn new skills while risking a sense of inferiority and failure
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AgeImportant Event Description AdolescencePeersTeens must achieve self-identity while deciphering their roles in occupation, politics, and religion.
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Adolescents have the job of finding where they fit into the world. You must have a healthy sense of who you are before you can form emotionally intimate relationships with someone else
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AgeImportant Event Description Young AdultRelationshipsThe young adult must develop marriage-seeking relationships while combating feelings of isolation.
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AgeImportant Event Description Middle AdultParentingAssuming the role of parents signifies the need to continue the generations while avoiding the inevitable feeling of failure.
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AgeImportant Event Description Late AdultLife Reflection Acceptance of one's lifetime accomplishments and sense of fulfillment.
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