Young Adulthood Essay

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    Young adulthood is the transitional period from the adolescent stage into adulthood. Chronological ages associated with the young adults are anywhere from age 18 to age 34 (Hutchison, 2015, pp. 273). Education plays a critical role during this period for most young adults, unfortunately for the Hispanic community this is an issue for a majority. With policies such as, the illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), this makes it difficult for the Hispanic to achieve

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    his essay from The Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Arnett discusses various myths attributed to young adulthood while providing evidence to refute them. Three primary myths appearing throughout literature on emerging adults include a lower mental well-being, overall selfishness and a refusal to grow up. Several parallels exist between Arnett’s observations and my own experiences in emerging adulthood, providing further proof of the falsehood of such myths. Common myths claim emerging adults experience

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    “Ethnic and Racial Identity During Adolescence into Young Adulthood: An Integrated Conceptualization” is a well written article on the struggle that people of color face when coming face to face with their identity in social situations. Umana-Taylor, Quintana, Lee, Cross, Rivas-Drake, Schwartz and Seaton (2014) analyzed ethnic and racial identity or ERI and how it relates to important developments and issues from early childhood well on into young adulthood. They worked to find the most important milestones

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    Just like how one must discover and establish their identity and morals throughout adolescence and young adulthood, one must find their voice through writing as well. It is a difficult feat to find the proper sum of humor, seriousness, casualness, pretentiousness, or satire. This is something that everyone struggles with as they routinely take pen to paper. Of course, this is all extremely subjective, but until recently my writing voice sucked. As I climbed the academic ladder, clumsily bouncing

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    biological age, social age, or spiritual age that best defines young adulthood? Young adult can be defined in many ways but the best that seems to clearly identify young adults is the social age concept. The reason I say this is because from a life course perspective, it is more beneficial to examine a person’s “social role transitions”. According to Hutchison (2015) he stated that some scholars define young adulthood as “the point where young person’s function in a community, having employment and developing

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    you don't need others which i believe makes a person an adult. Reasoning better is also a sign of adulthood. Because most teenagers aren't able to reason as good as most older people which leads to making the wrong decision which can lead to trouble. And at the age of 18 the brain still isn't fully developed which makes people not responsible yet. In the (Greenblatt article par.3) it says “Young people are bombarded with mixed signals about the scope of their rights and the depth of their responsibilities”

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    Understanding Substance Use in Emerging Adulthood: A Literature Review Emerging adulthood is defined as a development stage of life, starting approximately at age 18, or the end of high school, and spanning until 25, when adult roles are “officially” adopted (White et al., 2006). Emerging adulthood is a relatively new stage of development, which was developed by Jeffrey Arnett in 2000. Arnett explained that there are “gap years” where youths begin to identify new roles in life, which separate

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    “It's a development that predates the current economic doldrums, and no one knows yet what the impact will be… - The traditional cycle seems to have gone off course, as young people remain untethered to romantic partners or to permanent homes, going back to school for lack of better options, traveling, avoiding commitments, competing ferociously for unpaid internships or temporary (and often grueling) Teach for America jobs, forestalling the beginning of adult life” (Henig 199). This quote by Robin

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    our lives are divided into stages with inescapable hardships. The most difficult of these stages has proven to be adolescence and young adulthood, the years in which our personalities are defined. This juncture is the pinnacle of maturation, however, it is gradually becoming a plateau wherein inactivity is most prevalent. It is indisputable that American children and young adults alike are lingering in their youth for far too long. Many in their teens and twenties are holding tight to the freedom of

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    consists of young adults who graduate high school and college to only come back and live with their parent and rely on their support. As a result of this, there comes many challenges for both the parents and the child since the sandwich generation is stuck in the conflicting nature of taking care of their elderly parents while providing for their children by meeting their needs of emotional love and providing tangible needs. However, many realize that their kids are entering into adulthood and now these

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