PSY 3063- Chapter 10
Three stages of romantic relationships:
Ages 11-13: entry into romantic attractions and affiliations Ages 14-16: exploring romantic relationships Ages 17-19: consolidating dyadic romantic bonds (variations on three stages include early and late bloomers)
Identity moratorium is the status of individuals who do not experience a crisis and their commitments are either absent or only vaguely defined.
False
Relatively low rates of immigration are keeping the proportion of ethnic minority adolescents and emerging adults in the United States.
False
Researchers have found that securely attached adolescents are more likely than those who are insecurely attached to have emotional difficulties and to engage in problem behaviors such as juvenile delinquency and drug abuse.
False
New model:
Parents as important attachment figures and support systems while adolescents explore a wider, more complex social world
Identity is a self-portrait composed of many pieces
Vocation/career Political views Religious beliefs Relationship Achievement/intellectual Sexual Cultural/ethnic Interests Personality Physical
Adolescent media use has _______________ dramatically in the past decade
increased
Higher levels of parent-adolescent conflict is not associated with higher adolescent anxiety, depression, aggression, and lower self esteem.
False
Suicide
3rd leading cause of death in 10-to 19-year olds in the U.S. More adolescents contemplate or attempt it unsuccessfully than actually commit it Females are more likely to attempt suicide, but males are more likely to succeed Suicidal adolescents often have depressive symptoms
Juvenile delinquency
Adolescent who breaks the law or engages in illegal behavior Males more likely to engage in delinquency than females Rate among minority groups and lower-SES youth are especially high
Problem behaviors are often interrelated
Adolescents at highest risk experience multiple problems
Old model of parent-adolescent relationship:
Adolescents detach themselves from parents, move into a world of autonomy apart from parents
Erickson's stages- Identity versus identity confusion
Adolescents who cope with conflicting identities emerge with a new sense of self
Autonomy and attachment
Adolescents' competing needs for autonomy and control, independence and connection
Many adolescents develop a ______________identity
Bicultural- Identify in some ways with their ethnic group and in other ways with the majority culture Many consciously confront their ethnicity for the first time as adolescents
What is the difference between cliques and crowds?
Cliques are more personal than crowds.
Around the eighth and nineth grades, conformity to peers-especially to their antisocial standards-declines.
False
Around the globe, a number of adolescent health-compromising behaviors, especially illicit drug use and unprotected sex, are decreasing in frequency.
False
Four problems that affect the most adolescents:
Drug abuse Juvenile delinquency Sexual problems School-related problems
Digitally-mediated communication
Email Text/instant messaging Social networking sites Chat rooms Video/photo sharing Multiplayer online games Virtual worlds
Ethnic identity
Enduring aspect of self that includes: Sense of membership in an ethnic group and attitudes and feelings related to that membership
A recent research review concluded that at a general level, using digital technologies (surgin the internet, texting, etc.) while engaging in any learning activity (reading, listening to a lecture, etc.) improves learner attention and improves performance on many tasks.
False
Adolescents have a lower rate of depression than children. Females have a lower rate of depression than males.
False
Although questions about identity may be especially important during adolescence, identity formation ends during these years.
False
Factors contributing to depression
Genes Gender differences Certain family factors Poor peer relationships
Higher level of conflict was linked to:
Higher anxiety Depression Aggression Lower self-esteem (lessens as adolescent reaches 17 to 20 years of age)
_______________ does not remain stable throughout life
Identity
Marcia's 4 statues of identity:
Identity crisis Identity diffusion Identity foreclosure Identity moratorium
Which of the following statements about identity development is TRUE?
Identity development is lifelong process of adjustments
Parent-adolescent conflict
Increases in early adolescence do not reach tumultuous proportions Remains somewhat stable during the high school years Everyday conflicts serve a positive developmental function
Successful intervention programs include:
Intensive individualized attention Community-wide multiagency collaborative approaches Early identification and intervention
Immigrants experience stressors uncommon to longtime residents
Language barriers Dislocations and separations from support networks Dual struggle to preserve identity and acculturate Changes in SES status Undocumented status
Parental monitoring and management
Low parental monitoring is associated with negative mental health outcomes, predicts delinquency and substance use When parents engage in positive parenting practices, adolescents are more likely to disclose information Higher levels of parental monitoring reduced negative peer influence on adolescent risk-taking Parental snooping was a relatively infrequent parental monitoring technique and is an indicator of problems in adolescent and family functioning
Cause of delinquency
Lower class culture Parents less skilled in discouraging antisocial behavior Siblings and delinquent peers Academic success and delinquency
Push for autonomy
May puzzle and anger many parents Ability to attain autonomy is acquired through appropriate adult reactions to desire for control Adolescents gradually acquire ability to make mature decisions on their own Boys are granted more autonomy
Friends become increasingly important in meeting social needs:
Need for tenderness (secure attachment) Companionship Social acceptance Intimacy Sexual relations
Which of the following statements does the new model of parent-adolescent relationships emphasize?
Parents serve as important attachment figures and support systems during adolescence.
Depression and suicide
Rates of major depressive disorder range from 15-20% Combination of drug therapy and cognitive-behavioral theory effective in treating adolescent depression
Role of attachment
Securely attached adolescents are less likely to have emotional difficulties and to engage in problem behaviors
Managerial roles of parents, supervising adolescents' choice of:
Social settings Activities Friends Academic efforts
A rite of passage is a ceremony or ritual that marks an individual's transition from one status to another.
True
Adolescent suicide is the third leading cause of death in the U.S. adolescents, and numerous factors are linked to suicide.
True
Adolescents' ability to attain autonomy and gain control over their behavior is facilitated by appropriate adult reactions to their desire for control.
True
An adolescent who breaks the law or engage in behavior that is considered illegal is know as a juvenile delinquent.
True
Identity achievement is the status of individuals who have undergone a crisis and have made a commitment.
True
Marcia considers crisis to be a period of identity development during which the adolescent is exploring alternatives.
True
Parent-adolescent relationships become more positive if adolescents go away to college than if they attend college while living at home.
True
Teenagers typically prefer to have a smaller number of friendships that are more intense and intimate than those of younger children.
True
The Kaiser Family Foundation's recent survey on media use in the United States documented that adolescents media use had increased dramatically in the past decade. Adding up the daily media use figures to obtain weekly media use leads to the staggering levels of more than 60 hours a week of media use by 11-to 14-year olds and almost 56 hours a week by 15- to 18- year olds.
True
The status of individuals who have made a commitment but have not experienced a crisis is known as identity foreclosure. This occurs most often when parents hand down commitments to their adolescents, usually in an authoritarian way, before adolescents have had a chance to explore different approaches, ideologies, and vocations on their own.
True
Three stages characterize the development of romantic relationships in adolescence: (1) entering into romantic attractions and affiliations at about age 11 to 13, (2) exploring romantic relationships at approximately age 14 to 16, and (3) consolidating dyadic romantic bonds at about age 17 to 19.
True
The event that comes closest to being a culture-wide rite of passage in the United States is:
a high school graduation ceremony
Rite of passage
ceremony that marks an individual's transition from one status to another focus on transition to adult status
Key changes in identity are more likely to take place in _____________________
emerging adulthood than in adolescence
Psychosocial moratorium
gap between childhood security and adult autonomy relatively free from responsibility , able to try on new identities experimentation with different roles and personalities
Immigration
high rates of immigration contributing to the growth of U.S. ethnic minorities
Crowds
larger than cliques and less personal membership based on reputation may not spend much time together
Dating for gay/lesbian youth
may date other-sex peers, which can help clarify their sexual orientation or disguise it from others many have same-sex experiences with peers who are "experimenting"
friendships in adolescence
most teens prefer a smaller number of friendships that are more intense and more intimate positive friendships are related to a host of positive outcomes
A recent study 8- to 12-year-old girls found that a higher level of media multitasking was linked to:
negative social well-being
Positive ethnic identity is related to ____________________
positive outcomes for ethnic minority adolescents
"MAMA"
repeated cycles of moratorium to achievement
Dating and adjustment
romantic experiences linked with measures of adolescent adjustment
Cliques
small groups averaging 5 or 6 individuals usually same age and sex engage in similar activities
Cross-cultural comparisons
traditions and changes in adolescence around the globe Health Gender Family Peers
Sociocultural contexts and dating
values, beliefs, and traditions dictate the age at which dating begins
Peer pressure
young adolescents conform more to peer standards than children do boys were more likely to be influenced by peer pressure involving sexual behaviors than were girls