Chapter 13 PowerPoint
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EARLY ADULTHOOD:
Physical and cognitive development
Developmental Perspectives
Developmental Perspectives
Demographic Aspects
of Adulthood
Baby Boomers: 79 million Americans
Generation X or Twentysomethings
Different experiences
Conceptions
of Age Periods
Thirties: Best decade
“Only as old as you feel”
Age Norms and
the Social Clock
Aging:
biological and social change across
the life span.
Biological aging: the changes in the
structure and functioning of the human
organism over time.
Social aging
Changes
in an individual’s assumption and
relinquishment of roles over time
Transition points: relinquishing familiar
roles and assuming new ones.
Social norms
Standards of behavior that members of a
group share and to which they are expected
to conform
Age norms: Social norms that define what
is appropriate for people to be and to do at
various ages.
Age grading
The
arranging of people in social layers that
are based on periods in the life cycle
Social Clock: Internalized concepts that
regulate our progression through the adult
years.
Age-Grade Systems
Flexible
system in the U.S.
Life Events
Turning points at which individuals change
direction in the course of their lives
Periods in Adult Development
Developmental
approaches
continuity or discontinuity
Physical Changes and Health
Physical Performance
Different
peaks for different activities
Shifts in vision
Physical Health
87%
of Americans report their health as
excellent.
Dieting, Exercise, and Obesity
Physical Activity and Health Across
Cultures
HIV and AIDS
Reported
Changes in Adult Sexual Behavior
over the Past Decade
30% of those surveyed reported increase in
protection against AIDS.
Practicing Safe Sex
Many people still misinformed.
Socioeconomic Status,
Ethnicity, and Gender
Higher
death rate for poor
Women have longer life expectancy than
men
Women more likely than men to experience
depression
Changes in Drug and Alcohol
Use Over Time
College
students and singles more likely to
use drugs
Mental Health
52
million adults in U.S. suffer from a
mental disorder.
18 million suffer from depression.
Alcoholism
Stress: 6 in 10 feel great stress once a
week.
Gender Differences in Stress
Married
women admit to feeling more stress
than men.
Gender-role perspective for women: roles of
nurturers and caretakers more stress in
contrast to male roles.
Stress Reported by Nontraditional versus
Traditional College Students
More stress for nontraditional students.
Stages of Stress Reaction
1. Alarm reaction
2. Stage of resistance
3. Stage of exhaustion
Perception
of situation, social support
cushions stress.
Suicide in Young Adulthood
Rates
of young black males committing
suicide have risen since the late 1980s.
Sexuality
Heterosexuality
By age 22, 90% of young adults have engaged
in sex with multiple partners.
Gay,
Lesbian, and Bisexual Attitudes and
Behaviors
Rigid gender roles have given way to
acceptance; more similarities than differences
in human relationships.
Cognitive Development
Post-Formal Operations
Piaget
Knowledge
is not absolute but relativistic
Accept the contradictions in life and the
existence of mutually incompatible systems
of knowledge
Must find some encompassing whole by
which to organize their experience
Thought and Information
Processing
The
step-by-step mental operations that we
use in tackling intellectual tasks.
Cognitive Development in College Students
Knefelkamp
Developmental
Instruction Model
Structure
Diversity
Experiential learning
Personalism
Moral Reasoning
Moral Reasoning
Different
approach for men and women
Gilligan: Men and women have different
moral domains.
Men: right and rules; “ethic of justice”
Women: an obligation to exercise care and
avoid hurt; “ethic of care”