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Development in Adolescence

Development in Adolescence. Passage Rites. Performed in over 50% of preindustrialized societies Wesfield calls them “A Crash Course in Adulthood” Four high common steps: Separation Training Initiation Induction. Biological and Physical Changes.

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Development in Adolescence

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  1. Development in Adolescence

  2. Passage Rites • Performed in over 50% of preindustrialized societies • Wesfield calls them “A Crash Course in Adulthood” • Four high common steps: • Separation • Training • Initiation • Induction

  3. Biological and Physical Changes • Biologically, adolescence is the period from onset of puberty to adulthood • Pubescence = changes that lead to sexual maturity • Puberty = signifies sexual maturity • Growth Velocity – 2nd only to infancy • Body Composition • Primary & Secondary Sexual Characteristics

  4. Figure 11.1  Height at 50th percentile for U.S. children. Source: Health Department, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; based on data by H. C. Stuart and H. V. Meredith, prepared for use in Children’s Medical Center, Boston. Used by permission of the Milwaukee Health Department.

  5. Figure 11.2  Weight at 50th percentile for U.S. children. Source: Health Department, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; based on data by H. C. Stuart and H. V. Meredith, prepared for use in Children’s Medical Center, Boston. Used by permission of the Milwaukee Health Department.

  6. Figure 11.3  Growth curve for fat mass in boys and girls. Distinct average sex differences in ratio of fat-free to fat mass may account for many of the observed sex differences in motor performance. Source: Adapted from Malina & Bouchard, 1991.

  7. Figure 11.4  Four sources of concern most often mentioned by middle-class U.S. male and female adolescents. Source: Based on Gibson-Cline (1996), p. 217.

  8. Nutrition & Eating Disorders • Typical, active adolescent requires 50% more calories during adolescence • Many do not get the appropriate nutrition • Obesity and dieting • Body Mass Index • Anorexia • Bulimia

  9. Figure 11.5 Adults who are overweight (BMI . 27.8 kg/m2 for men and 27.3 for women), and their perceptions/ misperceptions about weight. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1998, p. 154.

  10. Cognitive Development: Major Changes in Thought • Five major changes in adolescent thought • Better able to deal with “possible” things • Better at thinking about abstract things • Think more about the process of thinking • More multidimensional (“depends on point of view”) • Able to handle less certainty in thinking

  11. Figure 11.6 All possible combinations of the four test tubes to which the fifth can be added. The experiment requires the subject to discover the combination(s) that yields a yellow liquid when potassium iodide is added. The correct solutions have a yellow background.

  12. Adolescent Egocentrism • Not a derogatory term! • Cognitive and emotional self-centeredness • Imaginary Audience (“what will people think if they see me?”) • Personal Fable – A feeling of being special and unique (“It won’t happen to me!”)

  13. Moral Development • Close link between moral and cognitive development • Carroll & Rest suggest 4-Steps in behaving morally: • Recognizing a moral problem (sensitivity) • Judging what is right and wrong (judgment) • Making a plan of action (motivation) • Putting the plan into action (action)

  14. Piaget’s Morality • Two ways of moral thinking: • Heteronomous morality 4-7 years • Autonomous Morality 10+ years

  15. Kohlberg’s Moral Theory • Closely linked to Piaget’s Theory • Moral development begins with the self (egocentric) • Eventually takes into account others in the immediate context • Finally becomes more universal and more independent

  16. Gilligan’s View of Morality • Suggests women progress from initial selfishness toward a recognition of social responsibility • Boys may be more concerned with law and order than with caring and compassion

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