Adolescence Essay

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    List 8: 1. Gender Identity (p.369): This concept is important for our understanding and sensitivity to other peoples’ gender. When we say gender, we initially mean the biological characteristics that determine whether we are male or female. This is somewhat different in gender identity because it involves the thoughts and acceptance of an individual’s gender no matter what their biological gender may be. An example of this would be someone who is born with biological characteristics of a female,

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    exist for adolescent, boys and girls. Depression starts to rise in girls around the ages of 13 to 14. Girls start to show a consistent higher rate of depression than boys (Nolen-Hoeksema & Girgus, 1994). Body dissatisfaction is an indicator in adolescence for depression and low self-esteem. In a study by Paxton, Neumark-Sztainer, Hannan, and Marla E. Eisenberg it was shown that this is a spiral relation. This means self-esteem could predict body dissatisfaction and depression, or depression could

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    I began this research interested in looking at mental health and its relationship to cigarette smoking. By searching the Internet, I found myself being drawn into the discourse surrounding cigarette smoking, mental health and adolescents/adolescence. By seeing nicotine as addictive, and therefore an abuseable substance, and understanding the neurological effects nicotine has on the brain, we can see how cigarette smoking is connected to mental health. In adolescents the effect is even more pronounced

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    moments in the first stages influenced my adolescence and identity. The first of Erikson’s eight stages of development is infancy (0 to 12 months). During this

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    as, “A tendency to direct increased attention and motivation to social domains may have adaptive advantages in this developmental window. The fundamental task of adolescence—to achieve adult levels of social competence—requires a great deal of learning about the complexities of human social interactions” (Peper and Dahl 135) Adolescences are widely pressured by school staff, parents, and peers to move into a more social dynamic when moving into a higher grade or in Riley’s case a new school district

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    Music Preferences

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    What physiological, psychological and social factors influence our musical preferences? Music refers to the art or science of combining vocal or instrumental sounds (or both) to produce beauty of form, harmony, and expression of emotion; however individuals differ in their preference of music. Development studies estimate that the auditory system of a foetus is fully functioning at around 20 weeks of pregnancy; at this point the foetus is able to the mother’s heartbeat and is able to recognise

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    Dobbs states that, “These traits may seem to add up to nothing more than foolish new stuff with friends. Look deeper, however, and you see that these traits that define adolescence makes us more adaptive, both as individuals and as a species.” During adolescence, the traits that make teens seem so erratic actually makes them more flexible which allows them to become smarter more successful adults. Dobbs then goes on to state that, “This long, slow, back to front

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    Affect Intensity/Reactivity is a stable individual differences in regards to the intensity of an individual's responsiveness. In other words, some individuals consistently experience their emotions with greater intensity than others, which elicits the need of an stimulus intensity moderator. This idea is supported by the Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) of Linehan, 1993), which suggests that in order to modulate the intensity of emotional stimuli, the brain tend to react with stronger or more

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    Multidisciplinary research has documented that parenting strategies influence children's cigarette use. Extending the extant literature, this article develops an integrative model that examines the effect of parenting strategies on children's smoking progression, in which children's self-esteem plays the role of mediator. The authors validate this model using longitudinal panel data from parents and children ages 10–17. The primary findings are that parenting strategies influence children's smoking

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    Milestone Paper #2- Madison and Alicia’s Development Madison and Alicia are sisters, who are both going through a very confusing, exciting, and challenging period in their life -adolescence and young adulthood, respectively. Madison is seventeen and experiencing all of the struggles and triumphs that adolescence has to offer, such as going through puberty, surviving high school, and gaining independence from her parents. While her nineteen year old sister, Alicia, is searching for her identity

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