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Introduction to Psychology: Psychosocial Development

Psychosocial Development

  • The process by which a person’s sense of self emerges as the result of interactions between his or her social and personal side

Epigenetic Principle

  • Erik Erikson proposed that the stages of development follow the Epigenetic Principle

  • Biological plan for growth that allows each function to emerge systematically until the fully functioning organism has developed

    • Although one can anticipate challenges that will occur at a later stage, one passes through the stages in an orderly pattern of growth

    • There is no going back to an earlier stage because experience makes retreat impossible

    • One can review and reinterpret previous stages in the light of new insights and experiences

    • Themes of earlier stages may reemerge

  • Do not think of stages as pigeonholes

    • Just because a person is described as being at a given stage does not mean that he or she cannot function at other levels

    • At every successive developmental stage, the individual is also increasingly engaged in the anticipation of tensions that have yet to become focal and in re-experiencing those tensions that were inadequately integrated when they were focal

Preschool Years

  • Infancy

    • Birth to 2 years

    • Maturation of sensory, perpetual, and motor functions

    • Attachment

    • Sensorimotor intelligence and early causal schemes

    • Understanding the nature of objects and creating categories

    • Emotional development

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Trust vs Mistrust

    • Feeding

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: mutuality with caregivers

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: Hope

      • An essential belief that one can attain one’s deep and essential wishes

    • Core Pathology: Withdrawal

      • Social and emotional detachment

    • The infant must …

      • Form a first loving, trusting relationship with the caregiver or develop a sense of mistrust

      • Trust the aspects of their world that are beyond their control

    • The infant will develop a sense of trust if its needs for food and and care are met with comforting regularity and responsiveness from caregivers

    • Infants must trust aspects of their world that are beyond their control

  • Toddlerhood

    • 2 to 3 years

    • Elaboration of locomotion

    • Language development

    • Fantasy play

    • Self-play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: autonomy vs Shame and Doubt

    • Toilet training

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: imitation

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: will

      • Determination to exercise free choice and self-control

    • Core Pathology: compulsion

      • Repetitive behaviors motivated by impulses or restrictions against the expression of impulse

    • The child’s energies are directed toward the development of physical skills, including walking, grasping, controlling the sphincter

    • The child learns control but may develop shame and doubt if not handled well

    • Beginning of self-control and self-confidence

    • Assume important responsibilities for self-care such as feeding, toileting, and dressing

    • Parents need to be protective but not too overprotective

    • If parents do not reinforce the child’s efforts to master basic motor and cognitive skills, children may begin to feel shame

    • They may learn to doubt their abilities to manage the world on their own terms

    • Children who experience too  much doubt at this stage will lack confidence in their own abilities

  • Early School Age

    • 4 to 6 years

    • Gender identification

    • Early moral development

    • Peer play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Initiative vs Guilt

    • Independence

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: identification

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: purpose

      • The courage to imagine and pursue valued goals

    • Core Pathology: inhibition

      • A psychological restraint that prevents freedom of thought, expression, and activity

    • The child continues to become more assertive and to take more initiative but may be too forceful, which can lead to guilt feelings

    • The challenge for this period is to maintain a zest for activity and at the same time understand that not every impulse can be acted on

    • Adults need to provide supervision without interference

    • If children are not allowed to do things on their own, a sense of guilt may develop, they may come to believe that what they want to do is always wrong

Elementary Years

  • Middle Childhood

    • 6 to 12 years

    • Friendship

    • Concrete operations

    • Skill learning

    • Self-evaluation

    • Team play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Industry vs Inferiority

    • School

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis:  education

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: competence

      • The free exercise of skill and intelligence in the completion of tasks

    • Core Pathology: inertia

      • A paralysis of action and thought that prevents productive work

    • Students are beginning to see the relationship between perseverance and the pleasure of a job completed

    • Children’s ability to move between the worlds of home and neighborhood, and school, and to cope with academics, group activities, and friends will lead to a growing sense of competence

    • Difficulty with these challenges can result in feelings of inferiority

      • Have you decided on a career? What alternatives did you consider? Who or what was influential in shaping your decision?

Adolescence

  • Early Adolescence

    • 12 to 18 years

    • Physical maturation

    • Formal operations

    • Emotional development

    • Membership in the peer group

    • Romantic and sexual relationships

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Group Identity vs Alienation

    • Peer relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: peer pressure

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: fidelity to others

      • The ability to freely pledge and sustain loyalty to others

    • Core Pathology: dissociation

      • An inability to connect with others

    • Young adolescents must confront the central issue of constructing an identity that will provide a firm bias for adulthood

    • Answer the question, “Who am I?”

    • Identity: organization of an individual’s drives, abilities, beliefs, and history

    • Involves deliberate choices and decisions, particularly about work, values, ideology, and commitments to people and ideas

    • Identity Statuses

      • Identity Diffusion

        • Do not explore options and made commitments

        • These individuals reach no conclusions about who they are or what they want to do with their lives

        • Apathetic, withdrawn, with little hope for the future, or they may be openly rebellious

      • Identity Foreclosure

        • Commitment without exploration

        • Foreclosed adolescents have not experimented with different identities or explored a range of options, but simply have committed themselves to the goals, values, and lifestyles of others (usually their parents)

        • Foreclosed adolescents tend to be rigid, intolerant, dogmatic, and defensive

      • Moratorium

        • Expiration with a delay in commitment to personal and occupational choices

        • Common and healthy for modern adolescents

        • The period is no longer referred to as a crisis because, for most, the experience is a gradual exploration rather than a traumatic upheaval

      • Identity Achievement

        • Strong sense of commitment to life choices after free consideration of alternatives

        • Few students achieve this status by the end of high school

        • Students who attend college may take a bit longer to decide

        • It is not uncommon for the explorations moratorium to continue until the early 20s

        • Some adults may achieve a firm identity at one period in their lives, only to reject that identity and achieve a new one later

        • Moratorium and identity achieved statuses

    • Adolescent Egocentrism

      • Adolescents become very focused on their own ideas

      • Everyone else shares one’s thoughts, feelings, and concerns

    • Imaginary Audience

      • The feeling that everyone is watching

      • Adolescents believe that others are analyzing them

ADOLESCENT EGOCENTRISM >> IMAGINARY AUDIENCE

  • Personal Fable

    • Self-generated, often romanticized story of one’s own personal identity

    • So unique that you’re misunderstood by others

  • Later Adolescence

    • 18 to 24 years

    • Autonomy from parents

    • Gender identity

    • Internalized morality

    • Career choice

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Individual Identity vs Identity Confusion

    • Peer relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: role experimentation

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: fidelity to values

      • The ability to freely pledge and sustain loyalty to values and ideology

    • Core Pathology: repudiation

      • Rejection of roles and values that are viewed as alien to oneself

Beyond School Years

  • Early Adulthood

    • 24 to 34 years

    • Exploring intimate relationships

    • Childbearing

    • Work

    • Lifestyle

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Intimacy vs Isolation

    • Love relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: Mutuality among peers

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: Love

      • A capacity for mutuality that transcends childhood dependency

    • Core Pathology: Exclusivity

      • An enlist shutting out of others

    • Intimacy refers to a willingness to relate to a person on a deep level, to have a relationship based on more than mutual need

    • Someone who has not achieved a sufficiently strong sense of identity tends to fear being overwhelmed or swallowed up by another person and may retreat into isolation

  • Middle Adulthood

    • 34 to 60 years

    • Managing a career

    • Nurturing intimate relationships

    • Expanding caring relationships

    • Managing the household

    • Psychosocial Crisis:  Generativity vs Stagnation

    • Parenting or mentoring

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: Person-environment fit and creativity

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: care

      • A commitment to concern about what has been generated

    • Core Pathology: rejectivity

      • Unwillingness to include certain others or groups of others in one’s generative concern

    • Generativity extends the ability to care for another person and involves care and guidance for the next and future generations

    • A person’s concern and energies must broaden to include the welfare of others and society as a whole

    • Stagnation happens when an individual is concerned with one’s own needs and comforts

    • Life loses meaning and the person feels better, dreary, and trapped

  • Later Adulthood

    • 60 to 75 years

    • Accepting one’s life

    • Redirecting energy toward new roles and activities

    • Promoting intellectual vigor

    • Developing a point of view about death

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Integrity vs Despair

    • Reflection on and acceptance of one’s life

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: introspection

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: wisdom

      • A detached yet achieve concern with life itself in the face of death

    • Core Pathology: disdain

      • A feeling of scorn for the weakness and frailty of others

    • Coming to terms with death

    • Achieving integrity means consolidating your sense of self and fully accepting its unique and unalterable history

    • People who have lived richly and responsibly develop a sense of integrity

    • If previous life events are viewed with regret, the elderly person experiences despair (heartache and remorse)

  • Very Old Age

    • 75 years until death

    • Coping with physical changes of aging

    • Developing a psycho-historical perspective

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Immortality vs Extinction

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis:  social support

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: confidence

      • A conscious trust in oneself and assurance about the meaningfulness of life

    • Core Pathology: diffedence

      • An inability to act because of overwhelming self-doubt

Strengths

  • The theory provides a broad, integrative framework within which to study the lifespan

  • The theory provides insight into the directions of healthy development across the lifespan

  • Many of the basic ideas of the theory have been operationalized using traditional and novel approaches to assessment

  • Longitudinal studies support the general direction of development hypothesized by the theory

  • The concept of psychosocial crisis identifies predictable tensions between socialization and maturation

Weaknesses

  • Explanations for the mechanisms of crisis resolution and process of moving from one stage to the next need to be more fully developed

  • The idea of a specific number of stages of life and their link to a genetic plan for development is disputed

  • The specific ways that culture encourages or inhibits development at each stage of life are not clearly elaborated

  • The theory and much of its supporting research have been dominated by a male, Eurocentric perspective that gives too much emphasis to individuality and not enough attention to connection and social relatedness

Moral Development

  • The mechanism by which children and adolescents learn the difference between right and wrong

Moral Reasoning

  • Their thinking about right and wrong and their active construction of moral judgments

S

Introduction to Psychology: Psychosocial Development

Psychosocial Development

  • The process by which a person’s sense of self emerges as the result of interactions between his or her social and personal side

Epigenetic Principle

  • Erik Erikson proposed that the stages of development follow the Epigenetic Principle

  • Biological plan for growth that allows each function to emerge systematically until the fully functioning organism has developed

    • Although one can anticipate challenges that will occur at a later stage, one passes through the stages in an orderly pattern of growth

    • There is no going back to an earlier stage because experience makes retreat impossible

    • One can review and reinterpret previous stages in the light of new insights and experiences

    • Themes of earlier stages may reemerge

  • Do not think of stages as pigeonholes

    • Just because a person is described as being at a given stage does not mean that he or she cannot function at other levels

    • At every successive developmental stage, the individual is also increasingly engaged in the anticipation of tensions that have yet to become focal and in re-experiencing those tensions that were inadequately integrated when they were focal

Preschool Years

  • Infancy

    • Birth to 2 years

    • Maturation of sensory, perpetual, and motor functions

    • Attachment

    • Sensorimotor intelligence and early causal schemes

    • Understanding the nature of objects and creating categories

    • Emotional development

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Trust vs Mistrust

    • Feeding

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: mutuality with caregivers

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: Hope

      • An essential belief that one can attain one’s deep and essential wishes

    • Core Pathology: Withdrawal

      • Social and emotional detachment

    • The infant must …

      • Form a first loving, trusting relationship with the caregiver or develop a sense of mistrust

      • Trust the aspects of their world that are beyond their control

    • The infant will develop a sense of trust if its needs for food and and care are met with comforting regularity and responsiveness from caregivers

    • Infants must trust aspects of their world that are beyond their control

  • Toddlerhood

    • 2 to 3 years

    • Elaboration of locomotion

    • Language development

    • Fantasy play

    • Self-play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: autonomy vs Shame and Doubt

    • Toilet training

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: imitation

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: will

      • Determination to exercise free choice and self-control

    • Core Pathology: compulsion

      • Repetitive behaviors motivated by impulses or restrictions against the expression of impulse

    • The child’s energies are directed toward the development of physical skills, including walking, grasping, controlling the sphincter

    • The child learns control but may develop shame and doubt if not handled well

    • Beginning of self-control and self-confidence

    • Assume important responsibilities for self-care such as feeding, toileting, and dressing

    • Parents need to be protective but not too overprotective

    • If parents do not reinforce the child’s efforts to master basic motor and cognitive skills, children may begin to feel shame

    • They may learn to doubt their abilities to manage the world on their own terms

    • Children who experience too  much doubt at this stage will lack confidence in their own abilities

  • Early School Age

    • 4 to 6 years

    • Gender identification

    • Early moral development

    • Peer play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Initiative vs Guilt

    • Independence

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: identification

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: purpose

      • The courage to imagine and pursue valued goals

    • Core Pathology: inhibition

      • A psychological restraint that prevents freedom of thought, expression, and activity

    • The child continues to become more assertive and to take more initiative but may be too forceful, which can lead to guilt feelings

    • The challenge for this period is to maintain a zest for activity and at the same time understand that not every impulse can be acted on

    • Adults need to provide supervision without interference

    • If children are not allowed to do things on their own, a sense of guilt may develop, they may come to believe that what they want to do is always wrong

Elementary Years

  • Middle Childhood

    • 6 to 12 years

    • Friendship

    • Concrete operations

    • Skill learning

    • Self-evaluation

    • Team play

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Industry vs Inferiority

    • School

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis:  education

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: competence

      • The free exercise of skill and intelligence in the completion of tasks

    • Core Pathology: inertia

      • A paralysis of action and thought that prevents productive work

    • Students are beginning to see the relationship between perseverance and the pleasure of a job completed

    • Children’s ability to move between the worlds of home and neighborhood, and school, and to cope with academics, group activities, and friends will lead to a growing sense of competence

    • Difficulty with these challenges can result in feelings of inferiority

      • Have you decided on a career? What alternatives did you consider? Who or what was influential in shaping your decision?

Adolescence

  • Early Adolescence

    • 12 to 18 years

    • Physical maturation

    • Formal operations

    • Emotional development

    • Membership in the peer group

    • Romantic and sexual relationships

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Group Identity vs Alienation

    • Peer relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: peer pressure

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: fidelity to others

      • The ability to freely pledge and sustain loyalty to others

    • Core Pathology: dissociation

      • An inability to connect with others

    • Young adolescents must confront the central issue of constructing an identity that will provide a firm bias for adulthood

    • Answer the question, “Who am I?”

    • Identity: organization of an individual’s drives, abilities, beliefs, and history

    • Involves deliberate choices and decisions, particularly about work, values, ideology, and commitments to people and ideas

    • Identity Statuses

      • Identity Diffusion

        • Do not explore options and made commitments

        • These individuals reach no conclusions about who they are or what they want to do with their lives

        • Apathetic, withdrawn, with little hope for the future, or they may be openly rebellious

      • Identity Foreclosure

        • Commitment without exploration

        • Foreclosed adolescents have not experimented with different identities or explored a range of options, but simply have committed themselves to the goals, values, and lifestyles of others (usually their parents)

        • Foreclosed adolescents tend to be rigid, intolerant, dogmatic, and defensive

      • Moratorium

        • Expiration with a delay in commitment to personal and occupational choices

        • Common and healthy for modern adolescents

        • The period is no longer referred to as a crisis because, for most, the experience is a gradual exploration rather than a traumatic upheaval

      • Identity Achievement

        • Strong sense of commitment to life choices after free consideration of alternatives

        • Few students achieve this status by the end of high school

        • Students who attend college may take a bit longer to decide

        • It is not uncommon for the explorations moratorium to continue until the early 20s

        • Some adults may achieve a firm identity at one period in their lives, only to reject that identity and achieve a new one later

        • Moratorium and identity achieved statuses

    • Adolescent Egocentrism

      • Adolescents become very focused on their own ideas

      • Everyone else shares one’s thoughts, feelings, and concerns

    • Imaginary Audience

      • The feeling that everyone is watching

      • Adolescents believe that others are analyzing them

ADOLESCENT EGOCENTRISM >> IMAGINARY AUDIENCE

  • Personal Fable

    • Self-generated, often romanticized story of one’s own personal identity

    • So unique that you’re misunderstood by others

  • Later Adolescence

    • 18 to 24 years

    • Autonomy from parents

    • Gender identity

    • Internalized morality

    • Career choice

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Individual Identity vs Identity Confusion

    • Peer relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: role experimentation

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: fidelity to values

      • The ability to freely pledge and sustain loyalty to values and ideology

    • Core Pathology: repudiation

      • Rejection of roles and values that are viewed as alien to oneself

Beyond School Years

  • Early Adulthood

    • 24 to 34 years

    • Exploring intimate relationships

    • Childbearing

    • Work

    • Lifestyle

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Intimacy vs Isolation

    • Love relationships

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: Mutuality among peers

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: Love

      • A capacity for mutuality that transcends childhood dependency

    • Core Pathology: Exclusivity

      • An enlist shutting out of others

    • Intimacy refers to a willingness to relate to a person on a deep level, to have a relationship based on more than mutual need

    • Someone who has not achieved a sufficiently strong sense of identity tends to fear being overwhelmed or swallowed up by another person and may retreat into isolation

  • Middle Adulthood

    • 34 to 60 years

    • Managing a career

    • Nurturing intimate relationships

    • Expanding caring relationships

    • Managing the household

    • Psychosocial Crisis:  Generativity vs Stagnation

    • Parenting or mentoring

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: Person-environment fit and creativity

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: care

      • A commitment to concern about what has been generated

    • Core Pathology: rejectivity

      • Unwillingness to include certain others or groups of others in one’s generative concern

    • Generativity extends the ability to care for another person and involves care and guidance for the next and future generations

    • A person’s concern and energies must broaden to include the welfare of others and society as a whole

    • Stagnation happens when an individual is concerned with one’s own needs and comforts

    • Life loses meaning and the person feels better, dreary, and trapped

  • Later Adulthood

    • 60 to 75 years

    • Accepting one’s life

    • Redirecting energy toward new roles and activities

    • Promoting intellectual vigor

    • Developing a point of view about death

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Integrity vs Despair

    • Reflection on and acceptance of one’s life

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis: introspection

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: wisdom

      • A detached yet achieve concern with life itself in the face of death

    • Core Pathology: disdain

      • A feeling of scorn for the weakness and frailty of others

    • Coming to terms with death

    • Achieving integrity means consolidating your sense of self and fully accepting its unique and unalterable history

    • People who have lived richly and responsibly develop a sense of integrity

    • If previous life events are viewed with regret, the elderly person experiences despair (heartache and remorse)

  • Very Old Age

    • 75 years until death

    • Coping with physical changes of aging

    • Developing a psycho-historical perspective

    • Psychosocial Crisis: Immortality vs Extinction

    • Central Process for Resolving Crisis:  social support

    • Virtue Developed if Crisis is Resolved: confidence

      • A conscious trust in oneself and assurance about the meaningfulness of life

    • Core Pathology: diffedence

      • An inability to act because of overwhelming self-doubt

Strengths

  • The theory provides a broad, integrative framework within which to study the lifespan

  • The theory provides insight into the directions of healthy development across the lifespan

  • Many of the basic ideas of the theory have been operationalized using traditional and novel approaches to assessment

  • Longitudinal studies support the general direction of development hypothesized by the theory

  • The concept of psychosocial crisis identifies predictable tensions between socialization and maturation

Weaknesses

  • Explanations for the mechanisms of crisis resolution and process of moving from one stage to the next need to be more fully developed

  • The idea of a specific number of stages of life and their link to a genetic plan for development is disputed

  • The specific ways that culture encourages or inhibits development at each stage of life are not clearly elaborated

  • The theory and much of its supporting research have been dominated by a male, Eurocentric perspective that gives too much emphasis to individuality and not enough attention to connection and social relatedness

Moral Development

  • The mechanism by which children and adolescents learn the difference between right and wrong

Moral Reasoning

  • Their thinking about right and wrong and their active construction of moral judgments