Category Archives: Socioemotional and Psychological Development in Adolescence

Oh, How the Times Have Changed

“As the historical record shows, the social, economic, and cultural aspects of adolescence have varied substantially across successive birth cohorts over the past 30 years in the United States. Young people born during the recessionary years of the early 1980s experienced a booming economy at high school graduation, unlike the experiences of those who were born several years before or later. The scarcity of job opportunities for high school and college graduates today will most likely be replaced by more abundant job opportunities for young people entering young adulthood in the coming decade. These socioeconomic variations tend to leave their mark on the life course as well as on the psyche of young people. The challenge for studies of adolescents in the future will be to incorporate such historical conditions into theoretical and empirical models rather than merely referring to them as contextual background. In other words, we need to directly query how changing circumstances have altered the development of young people.” (Johnson, Crosnoe, & Elder, 2011, p. 279)

I found it really interesting to read how adolescents have developed and are continuing to develop differently in comparison to the generations before them. The New York Times article (Cohen, 2010) highlighted many statistics that really brought to light how cultural and historical circumstances have impacted how quickly and in which way adolescents transition into adulthood. Continue reading Oh, How the Times Have Changed

Tracking Intention

“‘Clementi wrote,“other people have commented on his profile with things like ‘how did you manage to go back in there?’ ‘are you ok.’”The friends were treating “my making out with a guy as the scandal whereas i mean come on . . . he was SPYING ON ME. . . . do they see nothing wrong with this?”'” (Parker 29)

I had such mixed feelings about Dharun Ravi – on one hand, he’s a totally normal teenager. He talks without thinking and makes up grandiose lies to make his life seem cooler and I’ve encountered so many people who are exactly like him. On the other hand, he’s a heartless and malicious being who drove Tyler Clementi to committing suicide. As a future educator, this duality of Dharun as a person was hard to wrap my head around.
How do we track the progression of words that lead into action? Continue reading Tracking Intention

Let young adolescents be themselves

“Unlike their high school counterparts, young adolescents haven’t yet gone underground with their experiments in who they want to be and how they want to behave. They try out the possibilities like actors improvising on a public stage, taking first one role and then another. They are still playing with lots of possible selves.” (Cushman, K., & Rogers, L. 2008, P14)
This is so true, and I like the last sentence “They are still playing with lots of possible selves” in particular. Young adolescents haven’t completely figured out what they want to be, what they want to do or how they want to behave because they are still going through a phase where they experience dramatic physical changes, amplified feelings and expanding minds so that they can act very differently when they are being different selves. The most important thing is that in this special stage, every “self” is extremely easily influenced by their peers, usually in bad ways. Continue reading Let young adolescents be themselves

Big Brother is watching you–and it’s your fault

“At 9:13 P.M….At 9:17 P.M….at 1:37 A.M….At 6:39 P.M….At 5:20 P.M….at 7:44 P.M….at 9:41 P.M…” (Parker).

Choosing a quote for this week’s MVP was quite difficult. In Parker’s article alone there were numerous passages that caught my attention, especially those which made reference to the cyber world. Within 6 minutes of internet time, Ravi knew about Tyler’s musical interests, sexual orientation, computing needs, and personal beliefs printed on T-shirts. He easily and rapidly shared this information with friends online. Every single comment Ravi has made is now being used against him. Every comment or IM has minute-by-minute play-by-play. For Ravi, the possibility of prison and potential deportation hang over his head. If the aforementioned isn’t scary, what is? Continue reading Big Brother is watching you–and it’s your fault

We’ve got to strengthen adolescent female voices

“This phenomenon has been called the ‘loss of voice’ by Gilligan and her colleagues (Brown and Gilligan 1992), who purport that a girl experiences a gradual silencing of an authentic, imperious and often willful self in order to identify with certain culturally prescribed roles of women as self-sacrificial and please to others. (238)” Brown and Knowles, page 60. Continue reading We’ve got to strengthen adolescent female voices