DB 8 AND DB 9
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Copyright © 2018 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in whole or part without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
ESSENTIALS OF LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT, 5e
JOHN W. SANTROCK
SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN LATE ADULTHOOD
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Chapter Outline
- Theories of socioemotional development
- Personality and society
- Families and social relationships
- Ethnicity, gender, and culture
- Successful aging
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Theories of Socioemotional Development
- Erikson’s theory
- Integrity vs. Despair: Reflecting on the past and either piecing together a positive review or concluding that one’s life has not been well spent
- Life review - Looking back at one’s life experiences, evaluating and interpreting/reinterpreting them, developing mature wisdom and understanding
- Reminiscence Therapy
- Discussing past activities and experiences with another individual or group
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Theories of Socioemotional Development
- Activity theory
- The more active and involved older adults are, the more likely they are to be satisfied with their lives
- Socioemotional selectivity theory
- Older adults become more selective about their social network
- Spend more time with familiar individuals with whom they have had rewarding relationships
- Challenges stereotypes of emotional despair due to social isolation
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Theories of Socioemotional Development
- Socioemotional selectivity theory – Goals and Motivation:
- Knowledge-related goals
- Emotion-related goals
- Different trajectories throughout lifespan
- Older adults’ feelings mellow, fewer highs and lows in life
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Theories of Socioemotional Development
- Selective optimization with compensation theory:
- Successful aging is linked to 3 main factors:
- Selection – Reduced capacity and loss of functioning, which require a reduction in performance in most life domains
- Optimization – Possible to maintain performance in some areas through continued practice and the use of new technologies
- Compensation – When life tasks require higher level of performance than older adults’ capacity
- Life goals and personal life investments vary across life course
- Attainment of meaningful goals as a measure of life satisfaction
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Figure 16.1 – Degree of Personal Life Investment at Different Points in Life
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Personality and Society
- Big Five Personality factors change into late adulthood
- Older adults were more conscientious and agreeable than middle-aged and younger adults
- Increases in following aspects of conscientiousness
- Impulse control, reliability, and conventionality
- Certain personality traits are associated with mortality of older adults
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Personality and Society
- Ageism: Prejudice against others because of their age
- Most frequent forms include disrespect for older adults, assumptions about ailments or frailty
- Policy issues in an aging society
- Status of the economy and income
- Health care
- Technology
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Families and Social Relationships
- Lifestyles of older adults are changing
- Role of marital dissolution and remarriage
- Married older adults
- In 2012, 58% of U.S. adults over 65 were married; 27% were widowed
- Marital satisfaction is greater in older adults than middle-aged adults
- Married individuals more likely to provide care for a sick partner with a limiting health condition
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Families and Social Relationships
- Divorced and remarried older adults
- In 2012, 1% of women and 12% of men 65 years and older in the U.S. were divorced or separated
- Divorce is far less common among older adults, likely reflecting cohort effects
- Social, financial, and physical consequences of divorce
- Remarriage is increasing due to:
- Rising divorce rates
- Increased longevity
- Better health
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Families and Social Relationships
- Cohabiting older adults
- Increasing numbers of older adults cohabitate
- In 2010, 3% of older adults were cohabiting
- Numbers expected to increase as Baby Boomers age into late adulthood
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Families and Social Relationships
- Attachment and aging adults
- Older adults have fewer attachment relationships than younger adults
- With increasing age, attachment anxiety decreases
- In late adulthood, attachment security is associated with greater psychological and physical well-being
- Insecure attachment is linked to more negative caregiver burden in caring for patients with Alzheimer disease
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Families and Social Relationships
- Older adults parents and their children
- About 80% of older adults have living children, many of whom are middle-aged
- Increased diversity in parent-child relationships – divorce, cohabitation, and non-marital childbearing more common today than in past
- Adult daughters are more likely to be involved in the lives of aging parents
- Adult children often coordinate and monitor services for aging disabled parents
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Families and Social Relationships
- Friendships
- In late adulthood, new friendships are less likely to be forged; close friends chosen over new friends
- Activities with friends increase positive affect and life satisfaction in older adults
- Social support and integration
- Social convoy model – Throughout life, individuals are embedded in a personal network to whom they give and from whom they receive social support
- Social support helps individuals of all ages cope with life’s challenges
- Linked with older adults’ physical and mental health
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Families and Social Relationships
- Altriusm and volunteerism
- Older adults’ strategies more likely to be aimed at contributing to the public good
- 24.1% of adults ages 65+ engaged in volunteering
- Older adults perceive better well-being when they provide social support to others rather than when they receive it
- Volunteering is associated with positive outcomes:
- Constructive activities
- Productive roles
- Social integration
- Enhanced meaningfulness
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Ethnicity, Gender, and Culture
- Ethnicity
- Ethnic minority older adults overrepresented in poverty statistics, especially African Americans and Latinos
- Face problems related to both ageism and racism
- Despite stress and discrimination, many ethnic minority individuals have developed coping mechanisms that allow them to survive
- Extensions of family networks
- Role of churches
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Ethnicity, Gender, and Culture
- Gender
- Women experience burdens of both ageism and sexism
- Poverty rate for older adult females is double that of older adult males
- Special concerns for female ethnic minority older adults – racism, sexism, and ageism
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Ethnicity, Gender, and Culture
- Factors likely to predict high status for older adults in a culture:
- Have valuable knowledge
- Control key family/community resources
- Engage in useful/valued functions as long as possible
- Age-related role changes that give greater responsibility, authority, and advisory capacity
- Extended family, in which older person is integrated
- Respect for older adults
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Successful Aging
- Many abilities can be maintained and/or improved in older adults due to:
- Proper diet
- Active lifestyle
- Mental stimulation and flexibility
- Positive coping skills
- Good social relationships and support
- Absence of disease
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