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Adolescence-Adulthood

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Title: Adolescence-Adulthood


1
Adolescence-Adulthood
2
Adolescence
  • Adolescence is the transition period from
    childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to
    independence

3
Adolescence
  • G. Stanley Hall described adolescence as the
    tension between biological maturity and social
    dependence

4
Physical Development
  • Puberty paves way to a surge of hormones,
    creating mood swings.
  • The primary sex characteristics (reproductive
    organs) develop dramatically
  • Menarche- first menstrual period
  • Spermarche-first ejaculation

5
Physical Development
  • Early developing boys become stronger and more
    athletic, as well as more popular and have a
    higher self esteem.
  • Hereditary and environmental interaction plays a
    major role of how both boys and girls feel about
    puberty
  • During puberty, unused neural connections are
    weakened
  • Myelin also grows in the frontal lobe during
    puberty
  • The frontal lobe maturation slows down the
    emotional limbic system. This explains why
    teenagers can be impulsive
  • Younger teens are more likely to smoke or do
    drugs since they are unable to plan ahead.

6
Cognitive Development
  • Adolescents are more likely to worry about what
    others think about themselves. Since this is
    when they start to think about how others
    perceive them
  • During the early teenage years, reasoning is
    often self-focused. They feel that their private
    experiences are unique. They think that others
    can not understand their unique experiences

7
  • Formal operations is the shift from
    preadolescents thinking concretely to adolescents
    becoming more capable of abstract logic. This is
    Piagets theory
  • The teenagers ability to reason hypothetically
    and deduce consequences allows them to detect
    inconsistencies in others reasoning and to spot
    hypocrisy

8
Developing Morality
  • Kohlberg did studies in which he recorded the
    morality thoughts of people of different ages. He
    found that there were 3 different stages

9
Developing Morality
  • Preconventional Morality- When children before 9
    years old, have a preconventional morality of
    self interest. These children obey either to
    avoid punishment or to gain concrete awards

10
Developing Morality
  • Conventional Morality When young teenagers,
    use morality which includes caring for others as
    well as upholding laws and social rules just
    because they are rules and laws.

11
Developing Morality
  • Post conventional morality- When someone develops
    personally perceived ethical principles, they
    confirm peoples agreed upon rights

12
Developing Morality
  • Kohlberg constructed the moral ladder, which
    included the three stages
  • Once our thinking matures, our behavior becomes
    less selfish and more caring
  • Elevation- tingly, warm, glowing feeling in the
    chest, usually felt when witnessing someone doing
    charity

13
Developing Morality
  • Jonathan Haidt exclaimed in his book social
    intuitionist, that moral feelings overpower moral
    reasoning. He revealed that moral reasoning aims
    to convince others of what we feel
  • Joshua Greene found that when a person is faced
    with dilemmas, their neural responses varied,
    based on how much their emotion areas lit up
  • Despite the identical logic, the personal dilemma
    allowed emotions that altered mood judgment.

14
Developing Morality
  • Morality is influenced by social influences, and
    is doing the right thing.
  • Children are taught to be empathetic to others.
  • Those who rely on delay gratification
    (restraining ones impulse and waiting for a
    greater award) became more socially responsible
    as well as academically successfully. Students
    are engaged in responsible action through service
    learning.

15
Social Development
  • Erik Erikson exclaimed that individuals go
    through eight stages in life, each with a
    psychosocial task.
  • Till age 1, the issue was that of trust and
    mistrust
  • Till age 2, it becomes autonomy vs. shame and
    doubt
  • Till age 5, the issue is initiative and guilt

16
Social Development
  • Till puberty, the child is given the issues of
    inferiority and competence
  • From adolescence till becoming a young adult, it
    becomes about finding ones identity
  • For young adults, the issue is between intimacy
    and isolation
  • From 50-60 years old, it becomes generativity vs.
    stagnation.
  • From 60s up, the issue becomes integrity vs.
    despair.

17
Forming an identity
  • Erikson revealed that some teenagers take their
    parents values and expectations and use it as
    their identity.
  • Other teenagers tend to gain a negative identity
    by rejecting traditional values ant conforming to
    a particular group

18
Forming an identity
  • William Damon revealed that a main idea of
    teenagers is to try to make a difference in the
    world
  • Daniel Hart discovered that younger teenagers
    were more likely to reflect the values of a
    certain group while older teenagers were more
    likely to reflect their own personal values.
  • Older teenagers were also more likely to have
    intimacy, the ability to form emotionally close
    relationships. This is after these individuals
    get a better sense of who they are

19
Parent and Peer Influence
  • Positive relations with parents support positive
    peer relations
  • Teenage years is a time of decreasing parental
    connection and a more peer connection

20
Parent and Peer Influence
  • Parents have a bigger influence on religious
    faith, career, college and thinking values. Most
    teenagers share their parents political views

21
Emerging Adulthood
  • Emerging adulthood are people who are no longer
    teenagers but are not ready to take on adulthood
    responsibilities.
  • Due to this emerging adulthood, marriage has been
    delayed by several years.

22
Physical Changes in Middle Adulthood
  • Physical vigor has less to do with age it has
    more to do with a persons health and exercise
    habits.
  • In Eastern countries, respect is given to the
    aged. Power is seen to be derived over age
  • In many western cultures, young people are more
    prized.
  • Menopause is the ending of the menstrual cycle
    beginning around when a woman hits her 50th
    birthday. Estrogen is reduced during this period.

23
Physical Changes in Middle Adulthood
  • Menopause usually does not create psychological
    problems for women.
  • A womans attitudes reflect on how she will
    perceive and go through menopause
  • Bernice Neugarten went around and asked women who
    had their menopause how they felt. The majority
    felt at the prime of their lives.
  • Men experience a more gradual decline of sperm
    production over age. Testosterone levels,
    erection and ejaculation are also at a declining
    rate.

24
Physical Changes in later life
  • Life expectancy has increased from the average 49
    years to 67 years
  • Women outlive men and after the stage of infancy,
    outnumber them
  • After age 70, hearing, distance perception,
    reaction time, stamina, muscle strength, sense
    of smell all decrease
  • Neural process slow their rate
  • Around age 80, 5 of the brain shrinks.

25
Physical Changes in later life
  • Physical exercise however, can stimulate the
    development of some new brain cells and
    connections.
  • The risk of dementia increases, doubling every
    five years from age 60. It is not a normal part
    of the aging process.

26
Physical Changes in later life
  • Older adults who exercise regularly become smart
    thinkers due to the oxygen and nutrient
    circulation.
  • Alzheimers disease affects over 3 of the
    worlds population by age 75. They are not part
    of the normal aging process. It is the loss of
    brain cells and deterioration of neurons that
    produce the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.
    Memory and thinking thus decrease.

27
Aging and Memory
  • Recalling new information declines during the
    early and middle adulthood years.
  • Older adults are able to recall meaningful
    information more easily than meaningless
    information, they may however take longer to
    produce words to describe these memories

28
Aging and Memory
  • Thomas Cook and Robin West discovered that
    younger adults were more likely to recall names
    after one introduction, while older age groups
    had a poorer performance.
  • When asked how they heard a certain event or news
    , many could recall instantaneously upon a few
    moments, while asking after a couple of months
    prompted variations in their recalls.
  • David Schonfield and Betty-Anne Robertson found
    that recognition memory is better for older
    adults early in the day rather late.
  • Being able to recognize a set of words via
    multiple choices had a minimal decline when
    compared to the results of each age. It was the
    recall of the words which had a greater
    difficulty
  • Time based tasks as well as habitual tasks
    decline over age

29
Aging and Intelligence
  • Cross sectional studies are comparing people of
    different ages with one another.
  • These studies revealed that intelligence declined
    after early adulthood
  • They excluded the factors of generational
    differences of education as well as life
    experiences

30
Aging and Intelligence
  • Longitudinal studies is the retesting the same
    people over a period of time, these studies
    showed that intelligence may be stable through
    out the years. They however, excluded the factors
    of people dropping out of studies, those who were
    less intelligent and that in poor health.
  • The present day view is that fluid intelligence
    takes place by declining later in life and that
    crystallized intelligence does not. (Paul Baltes)
  • Crystallized intelligence is the accumulation of
    knowledge and skills

31
Aging and Intelligence
  • Fluid intelligence is the ability to reason
    speedily and abstractly
  • Scientists and mathematicians are more likely to
    have their best outcomes in earlier adulthood,
    while historians and writers experience success
    later in life.

32
Adulthoods Ages and Stages
  • Midlife transition takes place in the early
    forties and is associated with struggle, regret,
    and feeling struck down. Usually triggered by
    illness, divorce or by job loss.
  • The social clock is the cultural prescription of
    when the right time of each stage in life must
    occur. For example, what time to leave home,
    college, get a job, family, etc.

33
Aging and Intelligence
  • Romantic attraction is often influenced by chance
    encounters.
  • Not many identical twins would feel attracted to
    their twins partners.
  • The social clock varies from culture to culture

34
Adulthoods Commitments
  • Erik Erikson pinned two aspects of our live.
    Intimacy and Generativity.
  • Generativity is being productive and supporting
    future generations.
  • Love and work are two major themes of adulthood
  • The social expectation of families staying
    together, is explained by evolutionary
    psychologists in having a better chance of
    passing down ones genes.

35
Adulthoods Commitments
  • Due to the increased expectations of both women
    and men and womens increased independence,
    divorce rates have doubled in the past 40 years
  • Those who tested out their marriage before
    getting married had a higher rate of divorce and
    marital dysfunction.
  • The risk of poor martial outcomes appears
    greatest for those who cohabit prior to
    engagement. Cohabiters tend to be less committed
    to the ideal of enduring marriage.

36
Adulthoods Commitments
  • John Gottman discovered that stable marriages
    provide five times more instances of smiling,
    touching, complimenting, laughing than of
    sarcasm, criticism and insults.
  • Work satisfaction reveals the roles of the woman,
    such as a paid worker or a wife did not matter,
    but the quality of her experiences in these roles
    meant a lot.
  • Satisfying work correlates with life satisfaction

37
Well Being Across the Life Span
  • A persons feeling of satisfaction and well being
    are stable through out ones lifespan
  • Older adults may experience a higher rate of
    satisfactions since they had satisfied the tasks
    of early adulthood. They are filled with a strong
    sense of satisfaction and identity

38
Well Being Across the Life Span
  • Older adults are less sensitive to negative
    facts. The amygalda show decreased activity in
    response to negative events while maintain its
    responsiveness to positive events.
  • Mihalay Csikszentmihalyi and Reed Larson revealed
    that teenagers got over an emotion within an hour
    while older people endured their emotions longer.

39
Death and Dying
  • Death of spouse is the hardest for a person
  • When death comes at an expected time, grieving
    may be short lived.
  • When death comes earlier, grief is more severe
  • Erikson believed that older people were filled
    with a sense of meaning and identity when
    thinking about death

40
Continuity and Stages
  • Researchers who stress biological maturation see
    development as a series of genetically
    predisposed steps.
  • Researchers who stress slow continuous
    development stress experience and learning.
  • Piagetss, Eriksons and Kohlbergs ideas have
    shown us the ways people differ at various points
    in the life span.

41
Continuity and Stages
  • Lifelong development also shows stability and
    change
  • Personality gradually stabilizes throughout age.
  • When we age, we may change our earlier
    personalities but sustaining characteristic
    traits in comparison to our age mates.
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