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Becoming an Adult: Physical, Cognitive, and Personality Development * Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

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Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood. Becoming an Adult: Physical, Cognitive, and Personality Development. What role transitions mark entry into adulthood in Western societies? How do non-Western cultures mark the transitions to adulthood? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

Becoming an Adult: Physical, Cognitive, and Personality Development

*Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

Page 2: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*10.1 Emerging Adulthood

*What role transitions mark entry into adulthood in Western societies? How do non-Western cultures mark the transitions to adulthood?*How does going to college fit in the transition

to adulthood?*What psychological criteria mark the

transition to adulthood?*What aspects of early young adulthood make

it a separate developmental stage?

Page 3: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Emerging Adulthood

*Period between late teens and mid-to late twenties when individuals are not adolescents but are not yet fully adults

Page 4: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Role Transitions Marking

Adulthood

*Role Transitions - the process of assuming new responsibilities and duties*E.g., (Western Culture) voting, completing

education, full-time employment, establishing an independent household, getting marries, parenthood

*Rites of Passage - rituals marking initiation into adulthood*E.g., tribal rituals

Page 5: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Going to College

*67% of all high-school graduates go to college*Promotes intellectual and personal growth

*Returning Adult Students - college students over 25*Tend to be: problem solvers, self-directed,

pragmatic*Integrate coursework with employment

Page 6: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Psychological Views

*Establishing Intimacy*Intimacy versus Isolation - sixth stage in

Erikson’s theory and the major psychosocial task for young adults*Stronger sense of identity correlated to

higher levels of intimacy in young adults

Page 7: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*10.2 Physical Development and

Health

*In what respects are young adults at their physical peak?*How healthy are young adults in general?*How do smoking, drinking alcohol, and

nutrition affect young adults’ health?*How does the health of young adults differ

as a function of socioeconomic status, gender, and ethnicity?

Page 8: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Growth, Strength and Physical Functioning

*Physical functioning generally peaks during young adulthood*Overall young adults are healthy*Fewer deaths from disease

Page 9: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Lifestyle Factors

*Smoking*More than half of the cancers are related to smoking

(American Cancer Society)*Risks with second-hand smoke

*Drinking Alcohol*Binge drinking: type of drinking defined for men as

consuming five or more drinks in a row and for women as consuming four or more drinks in a row within the past 2 weeks

*Addiction: physical dependence on a substance such that withdrawal symptoms are experienced when deprived of that substance

Page 10: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Nutrition*Metabolism: how much energy the body needs*Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs): chemicals that

cause fatty deposits to accumulate in arteries, impeding blood flow*High-density lipoproteins (HDLs): chemicals that

help keep arteries clear and break down LDLS*Body mass index (BMI): a ratio of body weight

and height and is related to total body fat

Page 11: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Social, Gender, and Ethnic Issues

in Health

*Social Factors*Socioeconomic status - ability to acquire

adequate health care*Education - association with higher income;

higher awareness of dietary and lifestyle influences on health

*Gender*Women live longer than men on average; young

men are more likely to die from homicide *Ethnic Group Differences*Relationship between ethnicity and SES

Page 12: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*10.3 Cognitive Development

*What is intelligence in adulthood?*What types of abilities have been

identified? How do they change?*What is postformal thought? How does it

differ from formal operations?*How do stereotypes influence thinking?

Page 13: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*How Should We View Intelligence

in Adults?

*How should we view intelligence in adults?*Multidemensional - characteristic of theories of

intelligence that identify several types of intellectual abilities*Multidirectionality - developmental pattern in

which some aspects of intelligence improve and other aspects decline during adulthood*Interindividual Variability - patterns of change

that vary from one person to another*Plasticity - concept that intellectual abilities are

not fixed by can be modified under the right conditions at just about under point in adulthood

Page 14: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*What Happens to Intelligence in

Adulthood?

*Primary Abilities - groups of related intellectual skills (e.g., memory, spatial ability)

Page 15: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Secondary Abilities - broader intellectual skills that subsume and organize the primary abilities*Fluid Intelligence - abilities that make you a

flexible and adaptive thinker, allow you to make inferences and to understand the relations among concepts

*Crystallized Intelligence - the knowledge you acquired through life experience and education in a particular culture

Page 16: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Going Beyond Formal

Operations: Thinking in Adulthood

*Postformal Thought - thinking characterized by recognizing that the correct answer varies from one situation to another, that solutions should be realistic, that ambiguity and contradiction are typical, and that subjective factors play role in thinking

*Reflective Judgment - way in which adults reason through real-life dilemmas

Page 17: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Going Beyond Formal

Operations: Thinking in Adulthood

*Optimal Level of Development - the higher level of information-processing of which a person is capable

*Skill Acquisition - the gradual and haphazard process by which people learn new abilities

*Integrating Emotion and Logic in Life Problems

Page 18: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Role of Stereotypes on

Thinking

*Stereotype - a social belief representing organized prior knowledge about a group of people that affects how we interpret new information*Implicit Stereotype - activation of strong

stereotypes that is nonconscious, increasing the likelihood of their influencing behavior*Stereotype Threat - an evoked fear of being

judges in accordance with a negative stereotype about a group to which you belong

Page 19: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*10.4 Who Do You Want to Be?

Personality in Young Adulthood

*What is the life-span construct? How do adults create scenarios and life stories?*What are possible selves? Do they show

differences during adulthood?*What are personal control beliefs?

Page 20: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Creating Scenarios and

Life Stories

*Life-Span Construct - a unified sense of the past, present, and future based on personal experience and input from other people*Scenario - manifestation of the life-span

construct through expectations about the future*Social Clock - tagging future events with a

particular time or age by which they are to be completed

Page 21: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*McAdam’s Life Story Model*A personal narrative that organizes past

events into a coherent sequence

Page 22: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Possible Selves

*Representations of what we could become, what we would like to become, and what we are afraid of becoming

Page 23: Chapter 10: Young and Middle Adulthood

*Personal Control Beliefs

*The degree to which you believe your performance in a situation depends on something you do