Title: Perspective on Aging IV: Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
1Perspective on Aging IV Social Psychological
Aspects of Aging
- Suzanna Waters Castillo, PhD
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
- scastillo_at_dcs.wisc.edu
2When do we become old? Discussion Topic
- How does a society decide when old age begins?
3Social Theories on Aging
- Social theories and concepts about aging are
multiple lenses used to better understand how we
age. - Social theories on aging examine the relationship
between individual experiences and social
institutions e.g., aging and retirement aging
and institutional care aging and government
policy etc. - All have limitations, and some can be considered
more than others when attempting to understand
social changes in aging.
4Social Theories on Aging
5Social Theories of Aging
- Role Theory Our place in society
- Criticism
- There is great variation in terms of how older
persons manage their aging experience. - Older people are not simply adrift in a sea of
anomie, but continue to grow, find meaning, learn
and participate. - Not all cohort members experience a role-less
role that persists through aging.
6Social Theories of Aging
- Role Theory (Rosow)
- The hypothesis Our roles define who we are,
determine our self concept and affect our
behavior - Roles become more vague with aging and therefore
there is a decrease in self concept. - Because people are not socialized to ageing, this
results in role loss and uncertainty accompany
the aging
7Social Theories of Aging
- Activity Theory Engagement (Havinghurst)
- Activity theory is a widely supported opposing
theory to disengagement in old age. - This theory argues that actively engaged older
persons have greater life satisfaction - Empirical research has found more support for
activity theory than disengagement theory.
8Social Theories of Aging
- Activity Theory Engagement
- Life long patterns of interaction, health,
personality, work, influence activity level in
aging. - Family, gender, education, sex and occupational
background influence activity level in aging. - Most important is to understand the source of
disengagement i.e., voluntary or involuntary
i.e., reversible or irreversible.
9Social Theories of Aging
- Disengagement Theory (Henry and Cumming)
- Hypothesis is because of inevitable declines
with age, people become decreasingly involved
with the outer world and become more interior in
anticipation of death. - One positive is that it sets up the transition of
power from old to young.
10Social Theories of Aging
- Disengagement Theory
- Criticism
- This perspective did not explain the variation,
creativity and types of activity that many
elderly experience during aging. - It also did not address the severe distress
experienced by those elderly forced to withdraw
from social contact.
11Social Theories on Aging
- Continuity Theory
- As persons age they maintain a consistent pattern
of behaviors and adapt in ways that are
consistent with past behaviors - Life satisfaction is determined by how consistent
current behaviors are with those of ones
lifetime experiences - (Atchley, 1972, Havinghurst, and Tobin, 1968)
12Social Theories on Aging
- Continuity Theory
- The hypothesis is central personality traits
become more pronounced with age or - they are retained without many changes
- People are more likely to age successfully if
they maintain their preferred roles and methods
of adapting to lifes changes
13Social Theories of Aging
- Modernization Theory An early perspective
(Durkeim and Weber) - Identifies 4 factors that stimulated economic
advancement. - Urbanization
- Mass education
- Technological changes and improvement
- Advances in growth in economic production
14Social Theories of Aging
- Modernization Theory Loss of power
- As a consequence of this advancement the argument
states that in traditional societies elderly
played active and vital roles while in modern
industrial societies elderly lost position,
status and power. - With post modernism and related social changes
other theories are more important in
understanding the role of elderly as a group.
15Social Theories on Aging
- Modernization Theory Loss of power
- Modernization has resulted in a decline in small,
socially cohesive, traditional communities. - Individualization vs group support weakens the
position of elderly. - Modernization stimulates diversification in
beliefs.
16Social Theories on Aging
- Modernization Theory Limitations
- Most useful in understanding a specific time
period during which societal beliefs about
production of goods and family participation in
the distribution of income changed thus shifting
the role that elders played in maintaining and
supporting the family and societys economic
vitality. Atchley (1993) contends that
Modernization Theory is most useful in
understanding social change prior to WWII.
17Case Study Exercise
- Review the early (pre 1961-70s) social theories
on aging and identify why theories might be
expressed in this particular case study.
18Role, Activity, Modernization, Disengagement,
Continuity Which apply?
- Mrs. Marta Rau came to the US in the early 1920s
with her family. She was a midwife in eastern
Germany and came from a middle class family. Her
father was a doctor and mother a school teacher.
Establishing a livelihood was difficult in the US
for her husband. He went to work in the copper
mines of northern Minnesota and she worked as a
midwife while raising the 6 children and a small
farm. Although she had studied nursing in her
homeland and was a bright woman the fact that her
English was broken and that their income in the
US was small, she struggled socially and
economically. As an older woman, she came to
live with her daughter and son who ran a family
grocery. Marta helped in the store, cooked and
helped with her grandchildren. She maintained a
strong sense of her ethnicity and taught her
children to speak German and Polish. However,
she felt angry and frustrated with the small
community where she lived because there were
social circles she could never enter. Her entire
focus became her daughters family and business.
She worked long hours and enjoyed stocking
shelves and cleaning. Although she was proud to
be an American, she never felt that the younger
members of the village acknowleged her as an
American and that they were rude, without taste
and too modern. Even now, she continues to work
in the store, but has become increasingly angry
at the people areound her and will not even talk
to customers who go to the store. She has become
more traditional in her values of her culture of
origin and also more isolated. She had always
been vivacious.
19Social Theories on Aging
- Symbolic Interactionism
- Hypothesis is interactions of factors like
environment, relationship with others can affect
how people experience aging. - Emphasis is on reciprocity with the social and
physical world as a measure of how we age. - Self concept is affected by how people interact
within their social world i.e., define us and
react to us. - Can you give a case example of the above theory?
20Case Study Symbolic Interaction
- State
- Age, gender, social economic status, family,
education, former occupation, immediate living
environment, cultural factors, psychological
status, health status, relationship with micro
and macro community etc. - Case Example
21Social Theories on Aging
- Age Stratification Theory
- This is a move away from the individual with a
focus on understanding groups of older persons - Examination of the relationship between older
people and historical events in their lives. - Focus on structural, demographic and historical
characteristics tell us how different age groups
respond to social change.
22Social Theories on Aging
- Social Exchange Theory
- Hypothesis is individual status is defined by
the balance between the contributions that people
make to society and the costs to support them. - Variables that impact what society defines as
contribution are affected by age, gender,
social class, education and ethnicity. - Can you given a case example of the above theory?
23Case Study Social Exchange Theory
- State the social economic status including income
level, employment, educational attainment,
culture/ethnicity and how these factors were
viewed as contributing to society before and
after retirement. - Before retirement
- After retirement
24Social Theories on Aging
- Political Economy of Age
- Hypothesis is Social class and the economic
infrastructure detrermine ones access to
resources. - The dominant group in a society tries to hold on
to their position by perpetuating inequalities. - Lack of social infrastructure support for elderly
of lower social economic status. - Can you think of a case example that reflects the
above theoritcal perspective on aging?
25Social Theories on Aging
- Life Course
- The hypothesis is The aging experience is
shaped by multiple, complex forces i.e., history,
cultural meanings, socio economic status, cohort
group, social contexts. - There is a diversity of role and role changes
across the life span which are very dynamic and
multidirectional. - From beginning to end of life we develop and
change.
26Social Theories on Aging
- Social Phenominology and Social Constructionists
- The hypothesis is Each one of us construct our
own social experience and reality. - Thus the reality of aging is subject to change
in definition depending on who is doing the
defining. - Give an example of the above theory as it
pertains to an individual older persons
experience of life.
27Social Theories on Aging
- Feminist Perspective
- The hypothesis is The experiences of women are
often ignored in understanding the human
condition. - Research that supports womens experience in
aging especially those conditions which have the
greatest impact on the lives of women. - Why is the feminist perspective important as a
social theory of aging?
28Social Theories of Aging
- Social Justice Theory An alternative
- Identifies the type of support elderly are
entitled to by virtue of their contribution
related sacrifices/responsibilities made on
behalf of society. - Argues that the process of modernization cost the
elderly as a social category and that programs
developed to return their status to them are
based on social justice theory. - What are some examples of social policy in aging
that is based on the social justice theoretical
perspective?
29Social Theories of Aging
- Social Justice Theory An alternative
- This perspectives offers a more pragmatic
explanation of how older people were identified
as a social category needing support and
assistance. - Social Justice Theory (just due theory)
- Does not focus on what elderly contribute or the
position they hold. - Focus is on the contribution that elderly have
made to society over a lifetime.
30Social Theories of Aging
- Discussion Activity
- Identify at least 5 essential roles and related
activities that are at the core of your life at
this period in time. - Identify how these 5 roles and activities will
change for you at age 65, and at age 80. - Use attached handout.
31Discussion Worksheet
- Age now Roles Age now Activities
-
- Age 65 Roles Age 65 Activities
- Age 80 Roles Age 80 Activities
32Discussion
33Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Psychological Development
- Normal Cognitive Changes
- Adult Development Theories
- Personality and Self
- Stage Theories
- Erickson
- Levinson
- Process Theories
- Life Span Development
34Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Normal Cognitive Changes
- Life long abilities stay in place and changes
only occur for those abilities that are not at
the core of the persons life skills. - Crystallized memory stays in place and supports
intellectual function. - Major changes in intellectual functioning occur
only late in life and usually not before age 60.
35Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Normal Cognitive Changes
- The major change is a slowing of the cognitive
process i.e., problem solving etc. - This is due to age related changes in the CNS and
Sensory System. - Older adults will need more time to complete
physical and mental tasks.
36Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Stage Theories
- Ericksons Life Stage Development theory examines
the patterns and structure of life at different
stages (1963). - Ericksons stages are both incremental and
contingent. - Old age presents a range of identity that is
characterized as something between ego integrity
and despair. - Ego integrity involves positive meaning given to
the good and the bad that has occurred in ones
life.
37Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Stage Theories
- Theory expansion
- Later work of Kivnick and Erickson (1986) showed
that degrees of both conditions co exist ( p. 71) - and the challenge is to learn how to
manage/balance experiences of despair and ego
integration as one ages. - Theory is most useful as a perspective rather
than as an indicator of scientific validity.
38Exercise
- Life Strengths Inventory
- Work of Helen Kivnick that applies Ericksons
life stages to the interviewing process. - Review domains of Life Strength Inventory.
- (see p. 75)
39Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Stage Theories
- Daniel Levinson(1990) argues that the adult life
cycle is constructed of sequential eras which are
cyclical. - Each era is age specific and includes
- Structure building i.e., refinement and
maintenance - Structure changing
- Marriage, family and occupation are the focal
point of adult life structure, particularly in
the late life era. - Life structure is inherently unstable due to
nature of life.
40Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Stage Theories
- Levinson argues that there are 3 developmental
tasks that occur in each era before entering
another - Terminate previous life structure
- Develop concept of self appropriate to new era
- Initiate the new life era
41Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Stage Theories
- The utility of Levinsons life cycle theory is
that it provides clues about important life cycle
changes and how those occur. - Weakness is that many adults do not follow
Levinsons cycle categories. - Many psychologists argue that adult development
does not involve discrete stages and is not
cyclical, but is a process occurring between the
individual and the environment. (Riegel 1976).
42Break
43Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Process Theories Life Span Development
- This is a perspective about how humans age
psychologically and includes cognition,
intellectual function, personality and emotion. - Life span development approach considers the
complex process of a lifetime of developmental
stages throughout the life of the human organism. - This perspective argues that psychological
development takes place throughout life including
old age.
44Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Process Theories Personality and Self
- Personality is characterized by what an
individual says and does relative to their innate
nature and response to the environment. - Multiple theories abound however studies that
have examined the inner dimensions of personality
indicate that - Personality continues to develop throughout life
and is considered to be one of continuity in
healthy individuals. - There is no radical change in personality with
healthy individuals that occurs with aging.
45Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Life Span Development Personality and Self
- Self (the me and I) can be viewed as 4
components - Self concept (what we think we are like).
- Ideal self (what we think we ought to be).
- Self evaluation (moral evaluation of whether we
are living up to certain standards). - Self- esteem (whether we like or accept
ourselves).
46Social Psychological Aspects of Aging
Psychological Development
- Adult Development Theories Personality and Self
- At mid life we have a lot of information about
ourselves - As individuals age one is capable of avoiding
roles that do not suit us. - As time goes by one develops a clear idea about
the self. - Self acceptance increases with age which occurs
in the majority of older adults and over time
older adults indicate that they know themselves
better than anyone else. - (Atchley 1994).
47Case Study Exercise Social Psychological
Theories
- See Case Study of Mr. Sam Levine on pg. 122
- Read carefully and with your collegue, please
answer the questions at the bottom of the page.
48Break
49Quality of Life What matters in aging
- Self worth, sense of place/value in the world
- Independence and freedom
- Physical and functional health
- Optimistic attitudes
- Peaceful mind
- Dignity and respect
- Companionship
- Leisure and hobbies
- Being able to help/contribute
- Happy family life and harmonious relationships
- Children enjoying a good life and their positive
relationship - Harmonious relationshp with spouse
- Economic safety
- Good medical and dental care
50Quality of Life Indicators
- How might the QOL indicators vary by social class
and ethnicity?
51Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Adaptation is the ability to adjust to fit a
situation or environment which serves the purpose
of - Life satisfaction
- Maintenance
- Renewal
- Completion
- Reinforcement of Self
- Survival
52Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Specific Adaptation in Aging
- Adapting to less income
- Adapting to increasing dependency
- Adapting to lost roles and/or activities
- Coping with threats to self esteem or self concept
53Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Effective Adaptation No consensus on how to
define and there are many possible outcomes. - Life Satisfaction is one of the most frequently
used indicators of effective adaptation. - Life Satisfaction Scale (Havinghurst, 1963)
- The Good Life (Lawton, 1983)
54Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Life Satisfaction Scale (Havinghurst, 1963)
- Zest
- Resolution and Fortitude
- Completion
- Self-esteem
- Optimistic Outlook
55Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Life is Good
- Behavioral competency
- Psychological well being
- Perceived quality of life
- Positive environment
- Day (1991) argued that this approach denies
effective adaptation to those with chronic
illness and other problems. - Positive attitude the key determinant (Day 1991)
56Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Continuity
- Internal- ideas and memory
- Pressures come from points of reference that will
allow us to anticipate our response to life
challenges. - External- environment and people
- Pressures come from environmental reinforcement
and related role demands.
57Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Compensation
- Part of accommodation which allows us to take
actions that offset losses. - Compensation takes place for
- Social
- Physical
- Emotional
- Financial etc. losses
58Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Substitution
- This involves replacement of lost roles,
experiences, activities and everything. - What are several examples of substitution among
the elderly? - Can any be inappropriate?
59Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Consolidation
- This involves redistribution of time, energy,
financial resources, emotional commitments to
remaining roles. - How and when might consolidation be difficult for
some older persons?
60Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Managing threats to self identity and self esteem
- Defense mechanisms such as selective perception,
selective memory and selective interaction are
defense mechanisms used to support ones positive
sense of self.
61Social Psychological Aspects of Aging Personal
Adaptation
- Other aspects of adaptation
- Competency and capability
- Mental and physical
- Relative appreciation
- This is a coping strategy that allows one to
compare oneself to another or a group of others
that provides a positive sense of self.
62Successful Aging
- A counter point to societys negative views of
aging. - Various quality of life studies that identify
what contributes to successful aging also imply
lifestyle choices. - Some research indicates that successful aging is
relative to the individuals own perspective of
whether they are well elderly or frail.
63Productive Aging
- Productivity is more than paid work and includes
any activity that produces goods and services
whether paid or volunteer, training experience
and skill development. - Activity Theory
- Symbolic Interaction (person with environment)
64Exercise
- When you are 75, what will be the activities,
events, relationships for you that will define
successful aging? - Will you be productive at this time in your life
and if so how?
65Case Study
- What types of adaptation are present in Ed
Harriss life? - Why was he successful in adapting to change
through out his life? - Consider continuity theory, Ericksons life
stages etc. - How can knowledge of the process theories of
aging facilitate your work in gerontology?
66Discussion
67Your Notes