-
Rites of Passage
are ceremonies or rituals that mark a person’s transition from one stage of life to another.
-
Role: Family Member
Parents expectation of their children do not always match up with how their children view their roles as family members, and this may lead to tension
-
Role Friend
Because they spend a considerable amount of time with their peers, peer relationships are central to one’ s life as an adolescent.
-
Role : Student
For adolescents who are less invested, the role is less central, and thus may come into conflict with other roles.
-
-
Moral Development
is the changes we make in our sense of justice and of what is right and wrong and in our behavior related moral issues
-
OCEAN
OPENNESS-to experience, independent/conforming/practical/imaginative
CONSCIENTIOUSNESS-carful/careless/disciplines/impulsive
EXTRAVERSION-talkative/quiet/funloving/quiet/sober
AGREEABLENESS-sympathetic-fault-finding, kind, cold
NUERTOTICISM-stable/tense/calm
-
Prosocial Behavior
is caring about the welfare and rights of others, feeling concern and empathy for them, and acting in ways that benefit others.[1] Evidence suggests that prosociality is central to the well-being of social groups across a range of scales. [2]
-
Possible Selves
are those aspects of the self that relate to the future: their aspirations, concerns, and views of what is likely to happen to them.
-
Social Comparison
is the desire to evaluate one’s own behavior, abilities, expertise, and opinion by comparing them to others.
-
abstract modeling
occurs when adolescents rely on generalized principles that underlie the behavior that they observe.
-
Reinforcements
play a vital role in the behavior of a child. We learn moral behavior by being positively reinforced.
-
Bicultural Identity
where these individuals integrate the two worlds
-
Collectivism
the notion that the well-being of the group is more important than that of the individual
-
Generation Gap
a divide between adolescence and other periods of life that supposedly reflects profound differences in behavior, values, attitudes, lifestyle choices, and experiences.
-
Autonomy
the development and expression of independence
-
Reciprocal Socialization
is a socialization process that is bidirectional; children socialize parents just as parents socialize children
-
Co-parenting
describes a parenting situation where the parents are not in a marriage, cohabitation or sexual relationship with one another.
-
Nuclear Family
is a family group consisting of a father and mother and their children, who share living quarters.
-
|
|