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| Adolescence, 6/e Laurence Steinberg,
Temple University
Psychosocial Development During Adolescence Autonomy
Chapter Outline- Autonomy as an Adolescent Issue
- According to Erik Erikson, the earliest period during which the
issue of autonomy surfaces is toddlerhood.
- Puberty probably serves as the initial trigger for the gradual transformation
in family relationships that takes place during the individuation process. Following
puberty, young people become increasingly concerned with establishing relationships
outside of the family.
- The intellectual and cognitive changes that accompany adolescence
also support the growing trend toward independence and self-governance. The
enhanced perspective taking and hypothetical reasoning skills make adolescents
better decision makers than children.
- Finally, the social opportunities and responsibilities that accompany
adolescence also require and support the growth of responsible self-management.
- Three Types of Autonomy
- Psychologists have identified three types of autonomy that emerge during
adolescence.
- The first, emotional autonomy, has to do with the changes that occur in
the adolescent's close relationships, most notably with his or her parents.
- Behavioral autonomy is another important form of autonomy. It has
to do with the ability to make independent decisions and carry through with
them.
- Finally, value autonomy involves the development of a set of principles
about right and wrong that guide one's thinking and behavior.
- The development of emotional autonomy
- Over the course of adolescence, young people become less emotionally
dependent on their parents.
- They are less likely to turn to their parents for assistance, and
more likely to realize their parents are not all knowing and all powerful.
- They also have developed emotional relationships outside the family.
- Emotional autonomy and detachment
- Anna Freud believed that puberty led to disruption and conflict within
the family unit, and, as a result, adolescents must emotionally separate
themselves from their parents (a process known as detachment).
- Freud believed that detachment was a necessary, typical, and healthy process.
Research does not support Anna Freud's view. In fact, most studies find
that adolescents and their parents get along quite well.
- Emotional autonomy and individuation
- Peter Blos provides an alternative view to the development of emotional
autonomy and adolescent-parent relations. Blos believes that the concept
of individuation better describes the process that adolescents experience
in order to achieve emotional autonomy.
- Individuation involves the young person taking increasing responsibility
for the self, rather than expecting others to accept that responsibility.
The individual gradually realizes that he or she can function competently
on his or her own.
- Individuation requires a transformation in how the adolescent views him
or herself and how he or she acts with adults, but it is not a stressful
or highly tumultuous process.
- It is likely that individuation is triggered by puberty and by the social-cognitive
advances that accompany adolescence.
- The development of emotional autonomy begins in early adolescence and
continues into the young adult years.
- An early manifestation of the process occurs when an adolescent realizes
that his or her parents are not all knowing and all powerful.
- One of the latest developments to emerge is the ability to see the parent
as an individual with a life outside of being a parent.
- This may initially produce feelings of insecurity and discomfort, but
generally speaking most adolescents are able to work through these changes
without significant personal upheaval.
- Emotional autonomy and parenting practices
- Certain parenting practices have been found to be associated with
the healthy development of emotional autonomy.
- Psychologists now realize parenting that emphasizes both independence
and emotional closeness tends to be linked with autonomous functioning in young
people.
- Adolescents whose parents use more enabling behaviors than constraining
behaviors are more psychosocially healthy than adolescents whose parents are
highly constraining.
- Not surprisingly, the authoritative parenting style has been positively
linked with autonomous functioning in adolescence. Authoritarian parenting,
on the other hand, has been associated with excessively dependent behavior or
highly rebellious responses in adolescence.
- Finally, permissively and indifferently reared young people have
been found to become psychologically dependent on their peers.
- The Development of Behavioral Autonomy
- Behavioral autonomy involves the ability to arrive at an independent
decision and carry through on it. Researchers have considered three aspects
of behavioral autonomy: decision-making susceptibility to peer and parental
influence and self-reliance.
- Changes in decision-making abilities
- Due to the changes in perspective taking and hypothetical thinking,
the ability to engage in decision making improves throughout the course of adolescence.
- Lewis (1981) found that older adolescents are better than younger
adolescents at considering the future outcomes of a decision, using independent
consultants, assessing potential risks and considering the vested interests
of certain parties.
- Changes in conformity and susceptibility to influence
- The opinions and advice of others become more important as individuals
progress through adolescence.
- Adolescents tend to turn to parents and other adults for information
and advice concerning long-term decisions such as educational and occupational
issues.
- Peers typically influence more short-term decisions such as taste
in music and clothing.
- Studies looking at susceptibility to peer pressure in the absence
of adults find that young people tend to be most susceptible to peer influence
during early to mid-adolescence. It is likely that young people are highly susceptible
during that period due to individuation.
- Parenting practices are associated with the degree of peer orientation
evidenced by adolescents. Young people with strict parents who provide very
little opportunity for decision making within the family tend to be the most
peer oriented.
- Changes in feelings of self-reliance
- Self-reliance is a third aspect of behavioral autonomy that psychologists
have looked at in relation to adolescent development.
- Self-reliance involves an adolescent's perception of how autonomous
he or she is. Generally, females tend to report feeling more self-reliant than
males.
- Self-reliance has been positively linked with psychological and
social adjustment.
- The Development of Value Autonomy
- Value autonomy involves developing a set of beliefs that will guide
one's thinking and behavior about right and wrong. Increasingly, adolescent's
beliefs become more abstract, more principled and more internal.
- Moral development during adolescence
- Moral reasoning
- Lawrence Kohlberg, working from a cognitive-developmental perspective,
devised one of the most comprehensive theories of the development of moral
reasoning to date.
- Kohlberg believed that there were three levels of moral reasoning: preconventional,
conventional, and postconventional.
- Preconventional moral reasoners tend to consider the consequences of
a behavior in deciding whether it is the right course of action.
- Conventional moral reasoners refer to societal rules and standards in
making moral judgments.
- Those who think in a postconventional way see social rules and standards
as subjective, and reason about morality using general principles of right
and wrong.
- Kohlberg's theory has not gone without criticism.
- Carol Gilligan, for instance, has claimed that his theory is gender
biased because it emphasizes the male orientation toward moral reasoning.
She calls this perspective the justice orientation (focuses on rules,
individual rights, and independence).
- Gilligan claims that females approach moral decision making from a care
orientation, which focuses on maintaining interpersonal relationships
and emphasizes interdependence and interconnectedness of human beings
in moral decisions.
- Research has not substantiated Gilligan's claim that Kohlberg's theory
is actually biased against females. However, there is evidence to suggest
that females are more likely than males to approach moral decisions from
a care perspective first and then apply a justice perspective. Males tend
to follow a reverse order in approaching moral decision making.
- Moral reasoning and moral behavior
- Kohlberg's theory has been criticized because it doesn't tell us very
much about how people reason about day-to-day problems or the ways we
actually behave in moral situations.
- Kohlberg's theory holds up pretty well under these concerns. Individuals
reasoning on moral dilemmas like Kohlberg's parallel reasoning on everyday
situation and research indicates that behavior is related reasoning.
- Prosocial moral reasoning
- Another important alternative approach to moral reasoning, which has
emerged recently, is the study of prosocial reasoning.
- Generally, the researchers who study prosocial reasoning look at how
people think about issues like honesty, empathy and kindness.
- Researchers have found that young people who are engaged in community
service tend to demonstrate higher levels of prosocial reasoning than
young people who are not involved in these activities.
- Political thinking during adolescence
- Political thinking has also been studied during adolescence.
As would be expected, both types of thinking tend to become more abstract,
more principled and more organized while also becoming less authoritarian
and less rigid over the course of adolescence.
- Religious beliefs during adolescence
- Although religious beliefs become more cognitively advanced
during adolescence, participation in organized religion tends to decline
during the adolescent period.
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