Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Personal Development Chapter 4 Section 2.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Personal Development Chapter 4 Section 2."— Presentation transcript:

1 Personal Development Chapter 4 Section 2

2 I. Cognitive Development
“I found myself thinking about my future, and then I began to think about why I was thinking about my future, and then I began to think about why I was thinking about why I was thinking about my future.” - An adolescent’s thoughts.

3 Cognitive Development
Shows an adolescent’s ability to think abstractly (Piaget’s formal operations stage). Rationalization: a process in which an adolescent seeks to explain an often unpleasant emotion or behavior in a way that will preserve his or her self-esteem. Example: “I failed my English test because my teacher hates me” or “I failed because I was nervous about my date tonight”.

4 David Elkind: Problems teenagers face because of immaturity (1984).
Finding fault with authority figures. Argumentativeness Indecisiveness Apparent hypocrisy Self-consciousness Invulnerability

5 II. Moral Development Kohlberg’s Moral Development Theory
Teenagers become less egocentric as they mature. Many stay at Stage 4 forever (laws are moral rules established by authority). Many like the idea of “civil disobedience” (Stage 5 or 6).

6 What stage of Moral Development is this?
Young Vietnam War protesters

7 III. Identity Development
A. Erikson’s Theory of the Identity Crisis: Adolescence is where you build your identity. Children live in the present (care-free); adolescents think about the future. Most adolescents go through an identity crisis: inner conflict, worry about who you are. Role confusion exhibited by childish behavior and impulsive decision making.

8 Marcia’s view of the identity crisis (1966):
Four attempts to achieve sense of identity: Identity moratorium: seriously consider issues, but haven’t made any decisions. Identity foreclosure: have made decisions, but based on others’ suggestions. Identity confused or diffused: no serious thought given to making decisions; no sense of identity. Identity achievement: considered many identities and have freely committed themselves to occupations and other matters.

9 Social Learning View of Identity
When crisis does develop, it is usually because of an external factor (i.e. divorce, death, new friends, etc.) Albert Bandura: individuals develop by interacting with others.


Download ppt "Personal Development Chapter 4 Section 2."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google