Psychology lifespan
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Physical and Cognitive Development
in
Adolescence
DISCUSSION
What effects has school budget cuts had on adolescent physical health?
Are teens as physical active as they were in the past?
Are academic standards as high today as they were in the past?
INTRODUCTION
Phase of the Lifespan: Adolescence
“The period of life between childhood and adulthood.”
G. Stanley Hall (1904): “Adolescence is a turbulent time charged with conflict and mood swings.”
Varies by culture
School Transitions
Big fish little pond / Little Fish Big Pond
Dropping out / Irrelevant Curriculum
OVERVIEW
Physical Development
Puberty
Motor Development
Sexual Maturation
Brain Development
Health
Cognitive Development
Piaget
Information Processing Model
Social Cognition
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT
PUBERTY, p.1
“The physical transition to adulthood.”
Physical Aspects
Females enter this transition first
Onset change over time
Hormonal trigger / hormonal changes
Fat to muscle ratio’s change
PUBERTY, p.2
Psychological Aspects
Hall
Coins the term “adolescence”
Greater desire for autonomy
Social-Emotional Aspects
Ageism
Moodiness
Generation Gap
Physical
Menarche
Sexual Orientation
https:// youtu.be / CyUirQIUIJ0
MOTOR DEVELOPMENT
Coordination / shift in the center of gravity
Adolescence will develop increased coordination and motor ability together with greater physical strength and prolonged endurance.
They develop better hand-eye coordination.
Social and physical gains from sports.
BRAIN DEVELOPMENT
Synaptic pruning (prefrontal cortex)
Myelination (important)
Processing speed
Attention
Memory
Emotional/social networks more sensitive
Self-regulation
HEALTH
Changes in sleep patterns: Due to brain changes
Eating disorders
Increasingly emerging as early as sixth grade
STD’s / STI’s
Teen pregnancy (dropping)
Substance use and abuse
Teen Pregnancy in the United States. In 2015, a total of 229,715 babies were born to women aged 15–19 years, for a birth rate of 22.3 per 1,000 women in this age group. This is another record low for U.S. teens and a drop of 8% from 2014. Birth rates fell 9% for women aged 15–17 years and 7% for women aged 18–19 years
-CDC
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
PIAGET, p.1
Concrete Operational Stage
7 – 11 years of age
Now can distinguish fantasy from reality
Can classify, sub classify, reverse thinking etc…
Formal Operational Stage
Early and Late formal operations
Hypothetico-Deductive Reasoning: Can do both
Late: After age 15
Abstraction
Non verbal problem solving
INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL
Improved attention
Better able to use problem solving strategies
Meta cognition
Increases speed of processing
Increased memory
SOCIAL COGNITION
Social “Understanding”
Perspective Taking / Being “thoughtful”
Thinking about relationships
Idealism
Egocentric Thought
Personal Fable
Imaginary Audience
REVIEW QUESTIONS
Does everyone “grow out of” the personal fable?
At what age do we become capable of concrete operational thought?
Which sex tends to enter puberty earlier?
What did Hall say about adolescence?