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Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

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Page 1: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Adolescent Development

Psychology 242

Professor Jean Rhodes

Page 2: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Adolescence in a Changing Population

• There are about 40 million 10-19 year olds in the U.S.– 14% of population

• Average age of parents is about 35• 27% of all children under 18 live with one

parent (mostly mothers)– 29% Hispanic– 53% African American

• 16% of children under 18 live below poverty

Page 3: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Today’s Adolescents

Actual and Projected Number of U.S. Adolescents Aged 10-19, 2000-2100

Fig. 1.2

Page 4: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Development Processes

Developmental Changes are a Result of Biological, Cognitive, and Socioemotional Processes

Fig. 1.3

Page 5: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Development Processes

Biological, Cognitive, and Socioemotional Processes

Biologicalprocesses

Physical changes within an

individual’s body.

Page 6: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Development Processes

Biological, Cognitive, and Socioemotional Processes Cognitive

processes

Changes inthinking andintelligence.

Page 7: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Development Processes

Biological, Cognitive, and Socioemotional Processes Socioemotional

processes

Changes inrelationships, emotions,

personality, and social contexts.

Page 8: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Adolescence 242• Assignments:• Natural observation or flim clip (20%)• Midterm and Final examinations (35%

midterm, 40% final).: Multiple-choice, short answer, and short essay exam take will include questions about topics from the class. To do well, you will want to have studied information from class presentations and discussions, from readings, and from your observations.

• Attendance, reading, participation (5%)

Page 9: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Periods of Development• Childhood

– Prenatal Period– Infancy– Early Childhood– Middle and Late Childhood

Page 10: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Periods of Development• Adolescence

– Early Adolescence– Late Adolescence

Page 11: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Periods of Development• Adulthood

– Early Adulthood– Middle Adulthood– Late Adulthood

Page 12: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Adolescence & Early Adulthood

• Early adolescence– 11-15

• Late adolescence– 18-19

• Early adulthood– 19-30

Page 13: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Historical Perspective• The 20th Century

– G. Stanley Hall’s Storm-and-Stress View– Margaret Mead’s Sociocultural View

Page 14: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Myth of Storm and Stress• Most youth do not experience a stormy

adolescence• Those who do, often exhibit problems

throughout childhood• Adolescence is generally a time of continued

positive relations with parents, and most adopt their parents’ values

Page 15: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Theories of Adolescence: G Stanley Hall

• Recapitulation Theory:– life-span changes mirror evolutionary changes of

humans from ape-like to civilized.– First person to present a scientific theroy of

developoment that thought of adolescence as a distinct portion of the life span

• A period of transition from being “beastlike” to being “humanlike”

– Based on a misunderstanding of Darwinian theory

Page 16: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Theory

• An interrelated, coherent set of ideas that helps to explain and make predictions

Page 17: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Psychoanalytic theories

Superego Id Ego

• Freud

Personality Structure

Page 18: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

PsychoanalyticFreud

– Defense Mechanisms• Unconscious methods the ego uses to distort

reality and protect itself from anxiety

• Examples: Repression and Regression

Page 19: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

PsychoanalyticFreud

Fig. 2.1

Page 20: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

PsychoanalyticRevisions of Freud’s Theories

– Less emphasis on sexual motivations– More emphasis on social aspirations

Page 21: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Psychoanalytic

(Continued…)Fig. 2.3

Page 22: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Psychoanalytic(Continued from previous slide)

Page 23: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

CognitivePiaget

Fig. 2.4

Page 24: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

CognitiveVygotsky

– Cognitive skills are mediated by words, language, and forms of discourse

– Cognitive skills have their origins in social relations

Page 25: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Information Processing Theory

– How information is: • Perceived• Encoded• Represented• Stored• Retrieved

Cognitive

Page 26: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

BehavioralSkinner

– The scientific study of observable behavior responses and their environmental determinants

– Behavior is learned and often changes according to environmental experience

Page 27: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Social CognitiveBandura’s Social Cognitive Theory

Fig. 2.5

Page 28: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Ecological, ContextualBronfenbrenner

– Microsystem– Mesosystem– Exosystem– Macrosystem

Page 29: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Bronfenbrenner• Levels

Page 30: Adolescent Development Psychology 242 Professor Jean Rhodes

Eclectic Theoretical Orientation

Eclectic Theoretical Orientation

– Not following any one theoretical approach, but rather selecting from each theory whatever is considered the best in it