Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 18 & 19 Early Adulthood: Cognitive Development

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 18 & 19 Early Adulthood: Cognitive Development"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 18 & 19 Early Adulthood: Cognitive Development
Piaget’s & IP theory, & Factors influencing cognition Psychosocial Development Maslow’s, & Erikson, Types of intimate relationships, marriages and Divorces

2 Approaches to Cognition
Postformal picks up where Piaget left off Information-processing studies the encoding, storage, and retrieval of information during lifetime (see Ch. 24)

3 Postformal Thought Adult thinking and adolescent thinking differ in 3 ways, with adult thinking more: practical flexible dialectical

4 A Fifth Stage of Cognitive Development?
Postformal thought often viewed as fifth stage of Piaget’s theory In it, adults consider every aspect of a situation use intellectual skills for real life—work and relationships understand that conclusions and consequences matter

5 Subjectivity and Objectivity
Arise from individual’s personal experiences and perceptions Traditional models devalued subjective thought Objective thought—abstract impersonal logic For adults combination of the two works best

6 Emotions and Logic Trying to combine both logic and emotions in dealing with an emotional issue is challenging but at each stage of adulthood, adults can achieve this balance in contrast to adolescents who believe in subjective or objective reasoning

7 Cognitive Flexibility
Awareness that your perspective is not the only one Awareness that each problem has many potential solutions and knowledge is dynamic

8 Flexible Problem Solving
Adult thought requires flexible adaptation, which allows adults to cope with unanticipated events come up with more than one solution to problem

9 Dialectical Thought Cognitive flexibility at its most advanced
Every idea or truth(thesis) bears within it suggestion of the opposite idea or truth(antithesis)

10 Culture and Cognition There are notable differences between Eastern and Western thought more polar; right vs. wrong; black vs. white—Western thought more of a combination or compromise—Eastern thought

11 Culture and Cognition, cont.
Developmentalists feel culture helps to shape thought Life-span perspective is multicontexual and multicultural, stressing adults change because of maturation experience

12 Adult Moral Reasoning Ethical issues often present themselves
Taking responsibility for one’s own actions perceived by young adults of all ethnic groups as marker of adulthood

13 Cognitive Growth and Higher Education
The relationship between college education and adult development healthier, wealthier, as well as deeper, more flexible thinkers

14 The Effects of College Education powerfully influences cognitive development improves verbal and quantitative skills, and specific subject knowledge while enhancing reasoning, reflection, and flexibility of thought

15 The Effects of College, cont.
Educational influences, cont. year-by-year progression of students’ thinking end of college finds students have generally moved from simplistic either/or ideas to recognition of multiplicity of perspectives

16 Change in the Students The sheer numbers have increased greatly, worldwide In all nations, increased student diversity more women students more older students more culturally diverse students in United States more low-income students more working students

17 Theories of Development
Maslow: hierarchy of needs Once the lower order needs are fulfilled we aspire for the higher order needs Erikson: intimacy vs. isolation

18

19 Ages and Stages Patterns of the Past by 20s: identity by 30s: intimacy by 40s: generativity Adult lives today “are less orderly and predictable than stage models suggest” Social Clock: Culturally set timetable that establishes when various events and endeavors in life are appropriate

20 Intimacy Two primary sources are close friendships and romantic partnerships Friendships are based on Physical attractiveness Apparent availability (willingness to chat) Absence of exclusion criteria Frequent exposure to each other

21 Gender Differences in Friendship
Conversations and Expectations women  self-disclosure men  external matters—sports, politics, work female-female pattern may better reduce loneliness and self-absorption male-male pattern may be more effective and efficient, especially in work situations

22 Gender Differences in Friendship, cont.
Friendships Between Men and Women cross-sex friendships allow learning about common humanity and let people help each other gain skills problems may arise when a platonic relationship is sexualized or there are conflicts of expectations Same sex friendships may be most effective and efficient especially in the workplace

23 Love and Living Arragments
Sternberg’s Theory of love 1) passion 2) intimacy 3) commitment in West, consummate love— a combination of all three—is the ideal form difficult to achieve consummate love familiarity and security diminish passion

24 Cohabitation Cohabitation— a couple’s living together in a committed sexual relationship without being formally married increasingly common cohabitation not just for young adults slightly more than half of all women aged years have cohabited

25 Cohabitation does not necessarily benefit the participants
one study found people who cohabitate much less happy and healthy, and less satisfied with financial status than are married couples in another study, cohabiting relationships were 3 times as likely to be abusive than marriages in a third, compared to single adults, cohabitants are likely to have alcohol problems

26 Marriage proportion of unmarried adults is higher than at any time in the past century nearly one-half of all births are to single mothers who are increasingly unlikely to marry the fathers of their babies 20 percent of first births conceived before marriage divorce rate is 49 percent of marriage rate the rate of first marriages in young adulthood lowest in 50 years

27 Marriage, still most enduring evidence of couple commitment.
Worldwide research says married people are happier, healthier, and richer. One developmental factor affecting success of marriage is maturity of the partners A second factor is degree of similarity, or homogamy—marriage within same group heterogamy—marriage outside of group social homogamy—similarity of couple’s interests and role preferences

28 Marital Equity social exchange theory
in modern marriages, what matters most is perception of fairness, not absolute equality

29 Divorce Influenced by social and political context
affects many lives for years United States has highest divorce rate almost 1 in 2 first marriages end in divorce Historically, an increase, but stabilizing one reason: lower marriage rate

30 The Role of Expectations
People today expect more from marriage partners than in the past, but expectations are not always as well defined

31 The Developmental Impact of Divorce
Initially worse than expected in health happiness self-esteem financial stability social interaction achievement


Download ppt "Chapter 18 & 19 Early Adulthood: Cognitive Development"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google