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Hoorcolleges toets 1 - adolescent development

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All lecture notes from the first adolescent development test, very organized.

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  • May 22, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
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Adolescent development
Toets 1
Hoorcollege 1

Project 1 – project stars
- Large scale, national, longitudinal research project on pubertal
development, love, romantic relationships and sexuality among
adolescents
- Longitudinal study of dutch youth
- N = 1470
- Four waves in total, every 6 months
- 5 age cohorts
- 11-15 years, 13-17 years

Project 2 – ART project
An experimental investigation of developmental and individual differences
in adolescent risky decision making: the role of peers, siblings and parents
- Dutch study:
 607 adolescents 11-17 years
 Followed 1x per year for 3 years
- St. Martin study:
 450 adolescents 11-17 years
 Followed 1x per year for 2 years
 Lower educational tracks
10 risk behaviors:
- Alcohol
- Delinquency
- Gambling
- Internet
- Extreme sports
- Smoking
- School
- Unsafe sex
- Softdrugs
- Traffic

Project 3: when being different becomes the norm: how microaggressions
affect Dutch lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth
Three studies:
- Online sample of 267 dutch sexual minorities (16-22 years)
- School sample of 600 adolescents (school climate)
- Qualitative interviews with dutch adolescents

Defining adolescence
- The period between the onset of sexual maturation and the
attainment of adult roles and responsibilities
- The transition from:

,  ‘’child’’ status (requires adult monitoring)
 To ‘’adult’’ status (self-responsibility for behavior)
Course set up:
1. foundations
 intro, puberty, cognition, identity
2. social world
 family, peers, morality, love & seks
3. broader issues
 social media, achievement, problems

Adolescents in action
- teens react to the netherlands welcomes Trump
- teens are able to reflect, know the worries of the world

Conceptualizing adolescence
- adolescence is the healthiest and most resilient period of the
lifespan
- from childhood to adolescence:
 increase in: strength speed, mental reasoning, immune function
 increase in: resistance to cold, heat, hunger, dehydration and
mosttypes of injury

Sources of morbity and mortality in adolescence:
- primary caus of death/disability are related to problems of control of
behavior and emotion
- increase in: rates of accidents, suicides, homicides, depression,
alcohol & substance use, violence, reckless behaviors, eating
disorders, health problems related to risky sexual behaviors.
- Increase in: risk-taking, sensation-seeking, anderratic (emotionally
influenced) behavior

Recognized for a long time
- Youth are heated by nature as drunken men by wine – Aristoteles

Scientific questions – Ronald Dahl
- What is the empirical evidence that adolescents are ‘’heated by
nature’’?
- Are these changes based in biology?
 In the hormones of puberty?
 In specific brain changes that underpin some behavioral and
emotional tendencies and problems that emerge in
adolescence?
 What are the implications for interventions? Should we
intervene?

The father of adolescence
- G. Stanley Hall (1904) (1st president of APA)

, - Adolescence: Its Psychology and Its Relations to Physiology,
Anthropology, Sociologiy, Sex, Crime, Religion, and Education (2
volumes)
- Recapitulation Theory = he believed that development of the
individual reflected the development of the species (infants were like
animals, adolescents are savages and adults are normal)
- Storm and Stress = normal for all adolescents that as a result of
biological changes adolescents go through moments of storm and
stress

Amett (1999) – review of storm and stress
- Oversimplifies a complex issue
- Many adolescents navigate this interval with minimal difficulties
- However, empirical evidence for:
 Increased conflicts with parents (intensity)
 Mood volativity (and negative mood)
 Increased risk behavior
- Modified view of storm and stress
 Not a myth, real for many, but not all and not necessarily related to
psychopathology

Conceptualizing Adolescence across time
- Aristotle: youth are heated by nature as drunken men by wine
- G.S. Hall (1904): a period of heightened ‘’storm and stress’’
- 1920 Margaret Meade – questioned storm and stress in all cultures
- 1930-50s: a psychoanalytic perspective – Anna Freud – storm and
stress is normal (those who don’t experience storm and stress will
develop problems later on in life)
- 1960s and 1970s: attempts to understand the problems as due to
‘’raging hormones’’
- 1980s Petersen: questioned the idea that all youth experience
trouble (11% chronic difficulties, 32% intermitent, 57% healthy)
- 1990s Arnett: revised the idea of storm and stress
- 1990s-2000s: context and time period recognized as important,
thus different developmental trajectories, with consideration of time
and context
- 2000s: evolutionary ideas applied to recast concept of risk
- 2010s: neuroscience models of the adolescent brain in relation to
behavior

, Developmental trajectories of binge drinking during college




How to conceptualize Adolescent Development from a scientific
standpoint?
- Adolescence – interactions between biology, behavior and social
context
- Interdisciplinary approach needed

B. Defining adolescence
- The period between the onset of sexual maturation and the attainment
of adult roles and responsibilities
- The transition from:
 “Child” status (requires adult monitoring)
 To “adult” status (self-responsibility for behavior)

John P. Hill (1973) first president of the Society for Research on
Adolescence
– Framework for the Study of Adolescence
 Primary Changes – the developmental changes that make
adolescence distinctive
 Secondary changes – the psychological consequences of the
interaction between the primary changes and the settings –
organized into the domains of identity, autonomy, intimacy,
sexuality, and achievement

Universal primary changes
- Biological changes of puberty (brain)
- Development of abstract thinking
- Social redefinition of an individual from a child to an adult (or at
very least a non-child)

Age boundaries are not consistent across researchers
- Steinberg text:
 Early adolescence (10-13 years)
 Middle adolescence (14-17 years)
 Late adolescence (18-21)
 Young adulthood (22-30)
- Others:

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