Transcript PPT
Chapter 4
Adolescence
Adolescence
Read outloud exploring psychology…
Do Anna Freud’s statements written
over 50 years ago describe teens
today?
What is adolescence?
The transition from childhood to
adulthood
What marks the
admission into adulthood?
Rites of passage
ceremonies or rituals that mark
admission into adulthood
Theories of adolescence
Stanley Hall
Margret Meade….
Do Hall and Mead agree?
• Hall = storm and stress
• Meade = continuous process
childhood/adolescence/adulthood
What 3 task must
adolescence master
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Accepting your physical make up and developing
gender roles
Developing relationships with peers
Developing emotional independence from parents
and other adults
Developing $ independence
Deciding/preparing for a career
6. Develop cognitive (THINKING) skills and
tools necessary for social success
7. Understanding and achieving socially
responsible behavior
8. Prepare for marriage and family
9. Acquiring values that are harmonious and
appropriate…for what????
What marks the end of
childhood?
PUBERTY
SELF CONSCIOUSNESS???
Physical Changes
Growth spurts at different rates
Changes in height and weight
Development of private parts and hair
Muscle mass increases vs fatty tissue
Voice changes
Menarche/super menarche
Sexual Development
1. What is your belief about “friends
with benefits”
2. Development of attitudes towards
sex Yes / NO / Abstinence
3. What are your role expectations????
Double standard?? What’s good for
the goose is good for the gander!!!!!
4. What are your FEARS…..
Personal Development
4:2
How does an adolescence thinking differ
from a child?
More abstract thinking and reasoning
PIAGET’S FORMAL OPERATION STAGE
What is RATIONALIZATION…UGH!
Elkind on PG 103..comments?
ERIKSONS IDENTITY
CRISIS
IS THERE SUCH A THING?
Erikson’s Theory of the
Identity Crisis
WHO AM I??
Resolving the crisis..
What do you need to develop to resolve
the “crisis”?
confidence, trust, feeling of
competence?
Marcia View of Identity
Crisis
Social Learning Theory
/Bandura
• Bandura feels adolescence is one part
of a continuous process of
development that emphasis
interaction
• One of the principal developments of
adolescents is to become independent
of their families
• In becoming independent, the role of
peers becomes important
• Adolescents need and use each other
to define who they are!
Social Development 4:3
• In an effort to answer “Who am I”
adolescents form cliques
• Cliques - small, exclusive groups of
people within a larger group
• What cliques can you identify?
Groups help adolescents
– achieve self-confidence
– develop a sense of independence
– clarify values
– experiment with new roles
• Drawback to cliques
– fear of dislike can lead to conformity
• conformity - acting according to some
specific authority
– group pressure
• Both peer groups and parents have
influence
• peer groups set standards on fashion,
music, and school related issues
• parents have greater influence in
areas of marriage, religion, and
education plans
Adolescence can present some
temporary psychological difficulties
– illusion of invulnerability
– depression and suicide
– eating disorders
GENDER ROLES 4:4
Do you have a gender schema ?
If so, what is it?
Gender differences..
• Are gender difference real or
learned?
• Is one more superior?
• Nature and nurture influence
gender.. Roles are a changing…
Ponder
Why is identity significant to the adolescent.
During adolescence, the individual struggles to
arrive at an integrated sense of self or identity.
According to Erik Erikson, this occurs during a
period known as the identity crisis. Other
psychologists argue that this period need not be
marked by crisis.
What conflicts do adolescents
face?
• acquiring a masculine or feminine gender
role,
• developing appropriate relations with peers
• becoming emotionally independent,
• deciding on a vocation,
• achieving socially responsible behavior,
• acquiring values that are harmonious and
appropriate.
Problems adolescents develop as a
result of abstract thinking and
immaturity.
1.
2.
3.
4.
finding fault with authority figures,
argumentativeness,
indecisiveness,
apparent hypocrisy in living up to
their ideals,
5. self-consciousness,
6. invulnerability.