+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Date post: 15-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: kelly-vink
View: 218 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
34
Adolescence The transition period from childhood to
Transcript
Page 1: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Adolescence

The transition period from childhood to

adulthood.

Page 2: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Is adolescence getting longer or shorter?

Page 3: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Physical Development

• It all begins with puberty

Puberty: the period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing.

Page 4: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Physical Development

What is the time period of adolescence?

What produces puberty?

What is the reason for puberty?

Page 5: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 6: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Primary Sexual Characteristics• The body structures that make

sexual reproduction possibleOvaries Testicle

s

Page 7: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Secondary Sexual Characteristics

• Nonreproductive sexual characteristics

Female breasts

Deepening of male voice

Body hair

Jalo’s Hips

Page 8: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

When does puberty start?The Landmarks

• First ejaculation for boys

•Menarche for girls

Do we remember these things?

Page 9: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Puberty

Sequence is way more predictable than the

timing.How might timing differences effect an adolescent socially?

Would maturing early benefit girls and/or boys? Why or why not?

Page 10: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Cognitive Development

• Have the ability to reason but…….

•The reasoning is self-focused. Assume that their experiences are unique.•Experience formal operational thought

Page 11: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 12: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 13: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 14: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 15: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 16: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 17: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Lawrence Kohlberg and his stages of

Morality•Preconventional Morality

•Conventional Morality•Postconventional Morality

Page 18: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Preconventional Morality

•Morality of self- interest

•Their actions are either to avoid punishment or to gain rewards.

Page 19: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Conventional Morality

Morality is based upon obeying laws to

1.Maintain social order

2.To gain social approval

Page 20: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Postconventional Morality

•Morality based on your own ethical principles.

Page 21: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Talk is CheapHow do we turn morality into

action?

•Teach Empathy•Self-discipline to delay

gratification•Modal moral behavior

Page 22: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Social Development

Its all about forming an identity!!!

Page 23: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Identity• One’s sense of self.• The idea that an

adolescent’s job is to find oneself by testing various roles.

• Comes from Erik Erikson’s stages of Psychosocial development.

Page 24: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Identity

• Some teenagers take their identity early by sharing their parents values and expectations.

• Some teenagers will adopt a negative identity- opposition to society, but conforms to a peer group.

Page 25: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Intimacy

• Towards the end of adolescence, intimacy becomes the prime goal.

• Can you list the intimacy differences between men and women?

Page 26: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Trust vs. Mistrust

Age Important Event

Description

Birth - 18 months

Feeding Infants form a loving, trusting relationship with parents; they also learn to mistrust others.

Page 27: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt

Age Important Event

Description

18 months - 3 Years

Toilet Training

Child's energies are directed toward physical skills: walking, grasping, and toilet training. The child learns control along with a healthy dose of shame and doubt.

Page 28: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Initiative vs. Guilt

Age Important Event

Description

3 - 6 Years Independence Child becomes more assertive, takes more initiative, becomes more forceful.

Page 29: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Competence vs. Inferiority

Age Important Event

Description

6 - 12 Years School The child must deal with demands to learn new skills while risking a sense of inferiority and failure

Page 30: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Identity vs. Role Confusion

Age Important Event

Description

Adolescence Peers Teens must achieve self-identity while deciphering their roles in occupation, politics, and religion.

Page 31: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.
Page 32: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Intimacy vs. Isolation

Age Important Event

Description

Young Adult Relationships The young adult must develop marriage-seeking relationships while combating feelings of isolation.

Page 33: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Generativity vs. StagnationAge Important

EventDescription

Middle Adult Parenting Assuming the role of parents signifies the need to continue the generations while avoiding the inevitable feeling of failure.

Page 34: Adolescence The transition period from childhood to adulthood.

Integrity vs. Despair

Age Important Event

Description

Late Adult Life Reflection

Acceptance of one's lifetime accomplishments and sense of fulfillment.


Recommended