Psy 318 Adolescent Development Week 3, Dr' Muoz, Wells College - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Psy 318 Adolescent Development Week 3, Dr' Muoz, Wells College

Description:

Review from last week -- Anna Freud & Jean Piaget ... Jennie Huling 08 guest speaker today. ERIK ERIKSON'S. DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:72
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: mun112
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Psy 318 Adolescent Development Week 3, Dr' Muoz, Wells College


1
Psy 318 Adolescent DevelopmentWeek 3, Dr. Muñoz,
Wells College
  • Review from last week -- Anna Freud Jean Piaget
  • New reading -- Erik Erikson, Eight Stages Carol
    Gilligan, Exit or Voice?
  • Writing your autobiography -- questions?
  • Beth Aleris, Discussion Leaders for current
    research in adolescent development
  • Jennie Huling 08 guest speaker today

2
(No Transcript)
3
ERIK ERIKSONSDEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
  • 8 Stages of Human Development
  • at each stage there is a turning point or
    crisis and virtue
  • each stage has a central question that must be
    resolved for development to continue
  • stages can be revisited, they are integrated,
    never fully achieved.
  • development is a life long process

4
ERIK ERIKSONSDEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
  • young people can be remarkably clannish and
    cruel in their exclusion of all of those who are
    different, in skin color or cultural
    background, in tastes and gifts, and often in
    such petty aspects of dress and gesture as have
    been temporarily selected as the signs of an
    in-grouper or out-grouper p. 262

5
ERIK ERIKSONSDEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
  • It is important to understand (which does not
    mean condone or participate in) such intolerance
    as a defense against a sense of identity
    confusion p. 262

6
ERIK ERIKSONSDEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
  • The importance of work and love in adolescent
    development (pp. 264 - 265)

7
Piagets Stages of Cognitive Development
8
Cognitive Development
Personality Development
The upholding of a steady equilibrium during
the adolescent process is in itself abnormal
FORMAL
OPERATIONS
12 YEARS
test abstract hypothesis
manipulate symbolic concepts
9
(No Transcript)
10
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Exit-Voice Dilemmas in adolescence raise the
    conflict of how youth negotiate relationships at
    a time when issues of loyalty and identity are at
    the forefront of development.

11
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • exit central to the operation of classical
    market economy, is exemplified by the customer
    who, dissatisfied with the product of company A,
    switches to the product of company B (p. 283)
  • voice the attempt to change rather than escape
    from an objectionable situation--is messy,
    cumbersome and direct (p. 283)

12
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • loyalty the member who caresand what holds
    exit and voice in tension
  • should I leave silently? (exit)
  • should I say what I believe? (voice)
  • issues of individual identity within the group
    identity

13
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Development in adolescence thus hinges on loyalty
    between adolescents and adults, and the challenge
    to society, families and schools is how to engage
    that loyalty and how to educate the voice of the
    future generation (p. 285)

14
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Given the engagement of the adolescents passion
    for morality and truth with the realities of
    social justice and care, adolescents are the
    group whose problems of development mirror
    societys problems with regeneration (p. 285 -286)

15
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • The importance of listening as a way to sustain
    voice
  • The importance of maintaining connection even
    through disagreement as a way of sustaining voice
  • The importance of being different and still
    maintaining connection as a way of sustaining
    voice

16
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Defined in this context of relationships,
    identity is formed through the gaining of
    perspective and known through the experience of
    engagement with different points of view (p. 294)
  • voice depends on relationship while exit can be
    executed in isolation (p. 294)

17
CAROL GILLIGANS VIEWS ON MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • A central issue in adolescent development the
    tension between silence and speaking, where
    silence signifies exit and voice implies conflict
    and change in relationships (p. 295)

18
When you consider Erikson, Piaget, Anna Freud,
and Carol Gilligans explanations of what happens
in adolescence, what do you see? What
overlaps? What is interrelated?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com