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Adult Development Theories

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Jane Loevinger 7 Stages of Ego Development. Presocial: infancy-self-absorbed ... Pavlov's dog and Skinner's box exemplify the concepts of this field. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adult Development Theories


1
Adult Development Theories
  • Lecture1 Adult Development

2
Developmental Issues
  • Within scope of studying adult development,
    practitioners must decide which factors are
    biological, cognitive or socioemotional,
    consequence of their timely effect
  • Maturation Experience - orderly sequence of
    changes dictated by genetic imprint
  • Continuity Discontinuity - change which is
    gradual as contrasted by that which is in stages
  • Early Late Experience - relative impact of
    early or late maturation
  • Evaluating Development - relationship of all
    factors impacting Adults development

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Continuity vs. Discontinuity View of Human
Development
  • Continuity of development view involves gradual,
    cumulative change from conception to death
  • Discontinuity of development view involves
    distinct stages in life span
  • Early-Later experience issue degree to which
    early experiences or later experiences are key
    determinants of a persons development

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Theories of Adult Development
  • Psychodynamic Freud, Erikson, Loevinger
  • Cognitive Piaget, Vygotsky,
  • Learning-Behaviorism Watson, Skinner,
  • Social Learning Bandura, Mischel
  • Ethological Lorenz
  • Humanistic Maslow
  • Ecological Bronfenbrenner
  • Moral Religious Fowler Kohlberg
  • Career Ginzberg, Super, Holland
  • Eclectic no one specific model - little of each

8
Psychoanalytic Theories
  • Believe that behavior is a surface characteristic
    and therefore we need to analyze the symbolic
    meanings of behavior and the deep inner workings
    of the mind
  • Freud - believed that personality has three
    structures the id, the ego and the superego
  • Individuals use defense mechanisms to distort
    reality in order to protect itself from anxiety,
    and repression to push unacceptable id impulses
    out of awareness and back into the unconscious
    mind

9
Sigmund Freud
  • Believed that people move through psychosexual
    stages where the adult personality is finally
    formed
  • oral stage (18 months of age)
  • anal stage (1-1/2 to 3 years)
  • phallic stage (3 to 6 years)
  • latency stage (6 years to puberty)
  • genital stage (from puberty on)

10
Erik Erikson
  • Felt that Freud misjudged some important
    dimensions of human development believed people
    develop in psychosocial stages how they resolve
    conflicts of each stage will determine balance of
    personalities
  • trust vs. mistrust (infancy)
  • autonomy vs. shame and doubt (2nd year)
  • initiative vs. guilt (ages 3-5)
  • industry vs. inferiority (6 to puberty)
  • identity vs. identity confusion (adolescence)
  • intimacy vs. isolation (early adulthood)
  • generativity vs. stagnation (middle adulthood)
  • integrity vs. despair (late adulthood)

11
Jane Loevinger 7 Stages of Ego Development
  • Presocial infancy-self-absorbed
  • Impulsive early childhood-self-interested
  • Self-Protective early school-seek control
    dominance over others
  • Conformist late childhood early
    adolescent-judge self by externals
  • Conscientious late adolescent-personal relevancy
    societal standard
  • Autonomy adulthood-respect differing convictions
    principles
  • Integration adulthood-full self-acceptance

12
Cognitive Theories
  • Stress conscious thoughts and how the brain
    processes information
  • Piaget - stressed that children actively
    construct their own cognitive worlds
  • Through assimilation individuals incorporate new
    information into their existing knowledge
  • Accommodation occurs when they adjust to this new
    information
  • Piagets cognitive stages represent the process
    he believed all individuals undergo as they
    develop cognitively

13
Stages of Cognitive Development - Jean Piaget
  • 1. Sensorimotor Stage Birth to 2 years old - no
    thinking structures
  • 2. Preoperational Stage 2-7 years old - develop
    language skills cognitive structures prelogical
  • 3. Concrete Operational Stage 7 years to
    Adolescence - Begins to question life. Solves
    problems but haphazardly
  • 4. Formal Operations StageĀ  Adolescence and
    onward - capable of sophisticated logical
    thought. Can think both abstract hypothetically
    and solve problems using the logic of combinations

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Lev Vygotsky
  • Claimed that persons cognitive skills can be
    understood only when they are
  • Developmentally analyzed interpreted
  • Are mediated by words, language forms of
    discourse
  • Have their origins in social relations

17
Elements of Vygotskys Theory
  • Zone of Proximal Development range of tasks too
    difficult to master alone-but can be learned with
    guidance
  • Scaffolding changing level of support by
    adjusting amount of guidance given
  • Language Thought use of language to plan,
    guide monitor behavior in self-regulatory
    fashion

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Information Processing Theory
  • involves the ways in which individuals process
    information about their world
  • how information enters the mind
  • how it is stored and transformed
  • how it is retrieved to perform such complex
    activities as problem solving and reasoning

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Behavioral and Social Learning Theories
  • Behaviorists believe that we should only examine
    what can be directly observed and measured.
    Pavlovs dog and Skinners box exemplify the
    concepts of this field. Central to this theory is
    the Skinnerian process of classical and operant
    conditioning

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Social Learning Theory Albert Bandura Walter
Mischel
  • Allows for the cognitive process to mediate
    between environment and behavior
  • Bandura believed that people cognitively
    represent the behavior of others and then
    sometimes adopt this behavior themselves
  • His model shows a reciprocal influence of
    behavior, personal and cognitive factors, and
    environment

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Banduras Model of Reciprocal Influence
  • B Behavior
  • P(C) Personal Cognitive Factors (such as
    intelligence, skills self-contro)
  • E Environment
  • The arrows reflect how relations between these
    factors are reciprocal rather than
    unidirectional.

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Ethological Theories Conrad Lorenz
  • Believe that experiences at specific times in
    ones life has great influence on an individuals
    development
  • Ethology stresses behavior strongly influenced by
    biology, is tied to evolution, is characterized
    by critical or sensitive periods
  • Lorenz developed ethological concept of
    imprinting, rapid, innate learning within a
    limited critical period of time that involves
    attachment to the first moving object seen

27
Urie Bronfenbrenner Ecological Model
  • Stress strong environmental view of persons
    development
  • Bronfenbrenners model depicts interaction of
    environmental factors which influence development
  • His model includes 5 environmental systems
  • microsystem (family, school, peers etc),
  • mesosystem (connections between microsystems)
  • exosystem (social systems person not directly
    involved with)
  • macrosystem (culture lived in)
  • chronosystem (sociohistorical circumstances
    life course)

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Abraham Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
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Self-actualized People
  • Spiritually fulfilled
  • Comfortable with themselves others
  • Loving creative
  • Realistic productive
  • People with ideal healthy lives
  • Realistic knowledge of self accept self
  • Independent, spontaneous playful
  • Establish deep intimate relationships
  • Have a love for human race
  • Non-conformists but highly ethical

31
Lawrence Kohlbergs Theory of Moral Development 3
Stages
  • Level 1 Preconventional Reasoning child shows no
    internalization of moral values is controlled
    by external rewards punishments.
  • Level 2 Conventional Reasoning individual abides
    by certain standards (internal), but they are the
    standards of others (external), such as parents
    or laws of society
  • Level 3 Postconventional Reasoning morality is
    completely internalized not based on others
    standards-person recognizes alternative moral
    courses, explores options, then decides on a
    moral code

32
James Fowlers Religious Development
  • Stage 1. Intuitive-projective faith (early
    childhood) invent images of good evil
  • Stage 2. Mythical-literal faith (middle and late
    childhood) reason in more
  • Stage 3. Synthetic-conventional faith (between
    childhood adolescence) coherent belief system
  • Stage 4. Individuating-reflexive faith (between
    adolescence adulthood) responsibility for
    their religious beliefs
  • Stage 5. Conjunctive faith (middle adulthood).
    few to this stage being more open to paradox
    opposing viewpoints
  • Stage 6. Universalizing faith (middle or late
    adulthood) transcending specific belief systems
    to achieve sense of oneness with all being

33
Theories of Career Development
  • Three main theories describe manner in which
    people make choices about career development
  • Eli Ginzbergs Developmental Theory
  • Children and adolescents go through three
    career-choice stages fantasy, tentative, and
    realistic
  • Until about age 11, children are in fantasy stage
    with unrealistic visions of their career
  • Tentative stage is a transitional and occurs in
    the early to mid-adolescent years
  • Realistic stage explores, focuses then selects
    a career

34
Theories of Career Development
  • Donald Supers Self-Concept Theory
  • Individuals self-concepts play central roles in
    their career choices
  • During adolescence individuals first construct a
    career self-concept
  • Develop ideas about work
  • Crystallize or narrow their choices
  • Begin to initiate behavior for some type of
    career
  • Begin specific training for a career
  • In later life - after 35 years of age - begin to
    consolidate engage in career enhancement

35
Theories of Career Development
  • John Hollands Personality-Type Theory
  • An effort should be made to match an individuals
    career choice with his or her personality
  • Theory built upon assumption that everyone is a
    specific type will not change nor develop into
    other types
  • Hollands six personality types
  • Realistic conventional
  • enterprising intellectual
  • artistic social

36
Eclectic Theoretical Orientation
  • Follows no single approach, but takes factors
    from all theories
  • No single theory can apply to human development
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