By: Jaydel Mae E. Cal
By: Jaydel Mae E. Cal
• Identity achievement
• Foreclosure
• Moratorium
• Identity diffusion
• Identity achievement- identity status that described by Marcia, that is
characterized by commitment to choices made following a crisis, a period
spent in exploring alternatives
Brains of gay men and straight women are symmetrical, whereas in lesbians
and straight men the right hemisphere is slightly larger.
Others may be reluctant to disclose their sexual orientation, even to their parents for fear of strong
disapproval or a rupture in the family.
The average girl has her first sexual intercourse at 17, the average boy at 16,
and approximately one fourth of boys and girls report having had intercourse by
age 15.
1. Sexually transmitted
infections (STI)
2. Pregnancy
Factors:
• Early Puberty
• Poverty
• Poor school performance
• Lack of goals
• A history of sexual abuse
• Parental neglect
• Cultural or family patterns of early sexual experience
The absence of a father, especially early in life, is a strong factor. For those
teens in two parent families, having fathers who know more about their friends
and activities is associated with delays in sexual activity.
Teenagers who have close, warm relationships with their mothers are also likely
to delay sexual activity, especially if they perceive that their mothers would
disapprove.
The virus attacks the body's immune system, leaving the person vulnerable to a variety of fatal
diseases.
Symptoms of AIDS include extreme fatigue, fever, swollen lymph nodes, weight loss, diarrhea,
and night sweats.
Before: After:
More than 7 in 10 adolescent girls in the
United States have been pregnant at least
once before the age of 20.
By late adolescence,
emotionality tends to
become more stable.
One way to measure changes in adolescents' relationships with the important
people in their lives is to see how they spend their discretionary time.
Early adolescents often retreat to their rooms; they seem to need time alone to
step back from the demands of social relationships, regain emotional stability,
and reflect on identity issues.
Watching television
Listening to music
Watching movies
Relationships with parents during
adolescence are grounded largely in
the emotional closeness developed
in childhood.
If you were like most teens, you probably listened to different music from your
parents, dressed in a different style of clothing, and felt it was reasonable to
keep certain thing private from them.
Thus, parents of young adolescents must strike a delicate balance between too
much freedom and too much intrusiveness.
Arguments most often concern control over everyday
personal matters:
• Chores
• Schoolwork
• Dress
• Money
• Curfews
• Dating
• Friends
• Authoritative parenting continues to foster healthy
psychosocial development.
Adolescents whose parents later divorced showed more academic, psychological, and behavioural
problems.
Adolescents living with their continuously married parents tend to have significantly fewer
behavioural problems than those in other family structures (single parent, cohabiting, or step
families).
An important factor is father involvement.
The impact of a mother's work outside the home may
depend on how many parents are present in the household.
Cliques (adolescence):
structured group of friends
who do things together.
Examples:
• Poor parenting practices
• Parent-child hostility
• Peer deviance
Adolescents who have taken part in certain childhood intervention programs are less
likely get in trouble than their equally underprivileged peers.
Fortunately, the great majority of adolescents do not get into serious trouble. Those
who show disturbed behavior can- and should- be helped.
“Life would infinitely be happier if we could only be
born at the age of eighty and gradually approach
eighteen.”
-Mark Twain