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Chapter 9: Love & Sexuality

Chapter 9: Love & Sexuality. Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Department of Psychology The University of West Florida. Love. Changes across the adolescent years Stage 1— The Search Same sex groups seek out opportunities for interactions with other sex groups (e.g. malls, parks, sporting events)

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Chapter 9: Love & Sexuality

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  1. Chapter 9: Love & Sexuality Samuel R. Mathews, Ph.D. Department of Psychology The University of West Florida

  2. Love • Changes across the adolescent years • Stage 1—The Search • Same sex groups seek out opportunities for interactions with other sex groups (e.g. malls, parks, sporting events) • Stage 2—The Adults Step In • Adult-organized events that serve as mixers (e.g. dances, birthday parties, awards banquets) for mixed sex interactions

  3. Love • Changes across the adolescent years • Step 3—The Herds Merge • Mixed sex groups arrange on their own to share common activities (e.g. sporting events, movies, concerts) • Step 4—Parents’ Worst Nightmare or Coupling and Pairing • Individuals begin dyadic relationships and activities (e.g. dinner, movies, concerts, long walks on the beach) • Changes tend to be age graded and not based on physical maturation

  4. Love • Progression of preferences: • Functional aspects • Early and middle adolescents • Recreation • Intimacy • Status • College students • Intimacy • Companionship • Recreation

  5. Love • Progression of preferences: • Mate selection • Middle adolescence • Males—physical attraction • Females—interpersonal qualities • Late adolescence • Females and males—interpersonal qualities

  6. Dating Scripts • Cultural Scripts for Historical Dating • Male Script (Proactive) Includes: • initiating the date • deciding where to go • controlling the public domain (driving the car) • initiating sexual contact • Female Script (Reactive) Includes: • private domain (grooming & dress) • responding to the male’s gestures in the public domain • responding to his sexual initiatives

  7. Love • Sternberg’s Love triangle • Passion: physical attraction and sexual intimacy • Intimacy: closeness and emotional attachment • Commitment: long-term and sustaining promise of affiliation and fidelity

  8. Love: Sternberg

  9. Love: Sternberg • Sternberg’s Theory: Adolescent Perspective • In most adolescent love relationships, commitment is either missing or highly tentative • The absence of long-term commitment in adolescence means that there are two principal types of adolescent love: infatuation and romantic love • Lack of commitment in Western Industrialized cultures likely due to delayed marriage

  10. Love: Brown’s (1999) View: • Brown’s model contains four phases that recognizes the important role played by peers and friends : • Initiation phase • First tentative explorations of love; usually superficial, brief and often fraught with anxiety, fear, and excitement • Status phase • Begin to gain confidence in their interaction skills with potential romantic partners • Remain acutely aware of the evaluations of their friends and peers

  11. Love: Brown’s (1999) View: 3. Affection phase • Adolescents come to know each other better and express deeper feelings for each other • Beginning to engage in more extensive sexual activity 4. Bonding phase (usually occurs in emerging adulthood vs. adolescence) • The romantic relationship becomes more enduring and serious – partners begin to discuss the possibility of a lifelong commitment

  12. Get Over It! Breaking Up • How might typical adolescent love (passion and intimacy) contribute to break-ups? • Outcomes of break-up: • Sadness, bitterness, depression • Likely due to adolescent egocentrism—personal fable • Generally short-lived

  13. Get Over It! Breaking Up • Emerging Adulthood and Breaking Up • Relationship characteristics linked to breaking up: • Lower levels of intimacy and love • Fewer common characteristics • Greater commitment on the part of one partner than the other • Reasons for breaking up: • Boredom • Females more likely to end the relationship than males • Males’ impacted by the break-up for longer periods of time

  14. Post-Break-up Harassment • Romantic Harassment: • Persistent use of psychological or physical abuse to maintain the relationship once one partner has ended it. • Goal is to maintain the relationship • Most frequently males harass females • What forms might this take?

  15. Cohabitation • Highest rates of cohabitation in North America and Northern Europe • Myth: • Cohabitation reduces the likelihood of divorce once marriage occurs • Reality: • Higher rates of couples who cohabitated ended marriage with divorce

  16. Cohabitation • Failure of post-cohabitation marriage likely due to two factors: • Those who cohabitate develop habits that impede transition to marriage • Those who cohabitate are likely different from those who do not in value of marriage • Cohabitating couples may not be compatible for marriage commitment

  17. Sexuality • We will use the handout for this portion of the discussion..note differences between the 2007 data and the 2011 data.

  18. Percentage of High School Students Who Ever Had Sexual Intercourse, by Sex* and Race/Ethnicity,** 2007

  19. The Good News • 61.5% of adolescents reporting intercourse, reported that either they or their partner had used a condom during last sexual intercourse. • Overall, the prevalence of having used a condom during last sexual intercourse was higher among male than female students, and higher among black than white students. • Now, the bad news

  20. Percentage of High School Students Who Were Tested for HIV*, by Sex** and Race/Ethnicity,*** 2007 * Does not include tests conducted when donating blood. ** F > M*** B > W, H National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 2007

  21. Sexuality • Patterns of adolescent sexual exploration: • Masturbation • Necking/Petting • Sexual Intercourse • Oral Sex • Initial sexual exploration does not necessarily lead to continued sexual activity • Rates of sexual activity vary by sex and ethnicity

  22. Sexuality: Pornography • Changes over time: • Historically, print media and “adult” films were the dominant media and more limited with at least some limitations for age • Internet has made age limits weaker and access more private and less open to parental monitoring. • Parental monitoring of access to internet in the home is one preventative step

  23. Sexuality • Cultural Variations and Adolescent Sexuality • Restrictive Cultures: • Limited access to potential sexual partners • Punishment for violation of sexual prohibitions • Double standard for males (more permissive) than females (more restrictive) • Semirestrictive Cultures: • Generally, adolescent sexual behavior before marriage is prohibited • If discreet, adolescent sexual behavior is ignored • Should pregnancy occur, marriage is highly encouraged

  24. Sexuality • Cultural Variations and Adolescent Sexuality • Permissive Cultures • Adolescent sexual behavior allowed • Adolescents frequently receive instruction from older members of the culture • Most western cultures range from semirestrictive to somewhat permissive

  25. Sexuality • Gender & Sexual Scripts: • Cognitive frameworks for understanding how a sexual experience is supposed to proceed and how sexual experiences are to be interpreted • Learned through cultural interactions • In our culture: • Males initiate sexual encounters • Females set the limits on how far the sexual episode is allowed to progress • Sociobiologists see this as grounded in evolutionary perspectives

  26. Sexual Response Cycle • Excitation • Plateau • Orgasm • Resolution • At what point in the response cycle does an individual relinquish the right to say “NO”?

  27. Sexually Active Adolescents • Similar to their non-sexually active peers in • Self esteem • Life satisfaction • Differences include • May have lower academic achievement • Earlier maturing

  28. Sexually Active Adolescents • When sexual activity is initiated early (>15 yrs): • Higher likelihood of alcohol/drug involvement • Single parent home (low parent monitoring) • Higher rates of poverty (presence of peers engaging in risky behavior)

  29. Sexual Harassment • Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature constitute sexual harassment when this conduct explicitly or implicitly affects an individual's employment, unreasonably interferes with an individual's work performance, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment. • U.S. EEOC

  30. Sexual Harassment • Can begin as early as elementary school • Includes but is not limited to: • Teasing with sexually oriented taunts • Touching • Body contact • Sexual comments re: dress • Sexual advances or requests for sexual behaviors • Definitions extend to the classroom (elementary through university)

  31. Date/Acquaintance Rape • Use of force or coercion to gain sexual relations • 15% of adolescent and 25% of emerging adult females report experiencing date or acquaintance rape • Younger females typically experience date or acquaintance rape as their first sexual experience

  32. Date/Acquaintance Rape • 2008-2009 academic year at UWF had a higher than average incidence of date/acquaintance assault • Frequently alcohol is involved • Having sex with one who is incapacitated or legally under the influence of alcohol or drugs is rape

  33. Gay, Lesbian, & Bisexual Adolescents • Sexual Orientationone’s attraction to others (gay/lesbian, straight, bisexual) • Sexual experiencesone’s sexual behaviors • Sexual experiences do not equal sexual orientation

  34. Gay, Lesbian, & Bisexual Adolescents • Recognition of one’s sexual orientation frequently in early adolescence • Coming out (revealing one’s sexual orientation) to one’s friends, family or others begins in mid-adolescence (approx 16 yrs) • Sexual orientation linked to a complex interplay of nature and nurture

  35. Gay, Lesbian, & Bisexual Adolescents • Homophobia and cultural heterosexism can lead GLB adolescents to hide their identities • GLB adolescents’ stress and anxiety linked to the cultural responses to their sexual orientation

  36. Contraceptive Use • Typically responsibility for birth control falls to the female (sexual script) • Across recent years, males’ condom use has increased • More available in western and industrialized cultures

  37. Contraceptive Use • Contraceptive use based on accessibility and planning • Possession or use of contraception devices or pills is an admission that sexual activity may possibly occur • Likely linked to cognitive development (planning and monitoring one’s emotions and actions)

  38. Contraceptive Use • Cultural boundaries within the USA create mixed messages for adolescents • USA highest among industrialized Western nations in teen birth rate • Access to sex education limited due to comprehensive sex education being prohibited in many schools and parents’ lack of communication with adolescents

  39. Pregnancy, Parenthood and Abortion • Teen pregnancy is not always linked to continued problems • Subsequent problems linked to earlier problems in teens’ families • Both teen mothers and fathers frequently experience continued problems • Babies born to teen mothers can experience various complications (e.g. premature, low birth weight)

  40. Sexuality in Emerging Adulthood • Sexual activity more accepted as adolescents move into emerging adulthood • Problems of date rape remain • Alcohol frequently related to unprotected sexual activities • STD’s continue to be problems as use of condoms may give way to oral contraceptives

  41. Sexually Transmitted Diseases • STD’s occur across racial, ethnic, income, social, and educational boundaries • Two key problems: • Initial stages • Asymptomatic • Varying latency period between contact and symptoms • Review text on various STD’s

  42. Focus narrowly on reducing one or more sexual behaviors Base the program on theoretical approaches for other risky behaviours Give a clear message about sexual activity and contraceptive use Provide basic, accurate information about risks and methods Include activities that teach how to deal with social pressures Model and provide practice in negotiation and refusal skills Use a variety of teaching methods Incorporate behavioral goals specific to age, culture and sexual experience Run the program over a sufficient period of time Train teacher, youth workers and peer leaders who believe in the program Sex Education10 characteristics of effective programs

  43. Discussion Questions: • At what age should adolescents be able to legally give consent to engage in sexual behavior? • Justify your reason.

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