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Helps students understand how culture impacts development in
adolescence and emerging adulthood. Grounded in a global cultural
perspective (within and outside of the US), this text enriches the
discussion with historical context and an interdisciplinary
approach, including studies from fields such as anthropology and
sociology, in addition to the compelling psychological research on
adolescent development. This book also takes into account the
period of "emerging adulthood" (ages 18-25), a term coined by the
author, and an area of study for which Arnett is a leading expert.
Arnett continues the fifth edition with new and updated studies,
both U.S. and international. MyDevelopmentLab is an integral part
of the Arnett program. Key learning applications include a
personalized study plan, MyDevelopmentLab Video Series, and
MyVirtualTeen. A better teaching and learning experience This
program will provide a better teaching and learning experience- for
you and your students. Here's how: * Personalize Learning -
MyDevelopmentLab is online learning. MyDevelopmentLab engages
students through personalized learning and helps instructors from
course preparation to delivery and assessment. * Improve Critical
Thinking - Students learn to think critically about the influence
of culture on development with pedagogical features such as Culture
Focus boxes and Historical Focus boxes. * Engage Students - Arnett
engages students with cross cultural research and examples
throughout. MyVirtualTeen, an interactive simulation, allows
students to apply the concepts they are learning to their own
"virtual teen." * Explore Research - "Research Focus" provides
students with a firm grasp of various research methods and helps
them see the impact that methods can have on research findings. *
Support Instructors - This program provides instructors with
unbeatable resources, including video embedded PowerPoints and the
new MyDevelopmentLab that includes cross-cultural videos and
MyVirtualTeen, an interactive simulation that allows you to raise a
child from birth to age 18. An easy to use Instructor's Manual, a
robust test bank, and an online test generator (MyTest) are also
available. Click here for a short walkthrough video on
MyVirtualTeen!
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL51B144F17A36FF25&feature=plcp
This important book introduces Arnett's emerging adulthood theory
to scholars and practitioners in higher education and student
affairs, illuminating how recent social, cultural, and economic
changes have altered the pathway to adulthood. Chapters in this
edited collection explore how this theory fits alongside current
student development theory, the implications for how college
students learn and develop, and how emerging adulthood theory is
uniquely suited to address challenges facing higher education
today. Emerging Adulthood and Higher Education provides important
recommendations for administrators, counselors, and student affairs
personnel to provide effective programs and services to facilitate
their emerging adults' journeys through this formative stage of
life.
This important book introduces Arnett's emerging adulthood theory
to scholars and practitioners in higher education and student
affairs, illuminating how recent social, cultural, and economic
changes have altered the pathway to adulthood. Chapters in this
edited collection explore how this theory fits alongside current
student development theory, the implications for how college
students learn and develop, and how emerging adulthood theory is
uniquely suited to address challenges facing higher education
today. Emerging Adulthood and Higher Education provides important
recommendations for administrators, counselors, and student affairs
personnel to provide effective programs and services to facilitate
their emerging adults' journeys through this formative stage of
life.
This book paints a portrait of adolescent psychology in 4 major
regions: Africa/the Middle East, Asia, the Americas, and Europe.
Featuring 24 revised and updated chapters from the International
Encyclopedia of Adolescence (2007), readers are introduced to the
way the majority of the world's adolescents actually live. Most
contributors are indigenous to the country they review. As a whole
the book paints an engaging panorama of adolescent life around the
world, broadening students' cultural perspective. All chapters
follow the same template to make it easier to compare topics across
countries: Background (including demographics, ethnic diversity,
and political system), Period of Adolescence, Beliefs, Gender, the
Self, Family Relationships, Friends and Peers/Youth Culture, Love
and Sexuality, Health Risk Behavior, Education, Work, Media,
Politics and Military, and Unique Issues. Each chapter contains a
map and photos and a list of references and suggested readings. The
introductory chapter explains why the countries were selected and
introduces the book's common themes. The section on Africa and the
Middle East introduces students to teen life in Cameroon, one of
the few places left where adolescents go through formal puberty
rituals. In addition, readers learn about adolescent life in
Ethiopia, Israel, Morocco, Nigeria, and Sudan. Next we travel to
Asia -- China, India, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Here readers
see how economic growth in India and China is creating
opportunities for young people. In The Americas, readers are
introduced to life in Argentina, Canada, Chile, Mexico, Peru, and
the United States. The book concludes with adolescent life in
Europe including the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, the
Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and the UK. Intended for courses in
adolescent psychology, lifespan development, and/or cultural
(cross-cultural) psychology taught in departments of psychology,
human development and family studies, sociology, and education,
this book will also appeal to researchers and clinicians who study
or work with adolescents.
The transition from adolescence to adulthood has undergone
significant changes in recent decades. Unlike a half century ago,
when young people in industrialized countries moved from
adolescence into young adulthood in relatively short order at
around age 20, now the decade from the late teens to the late
twenties is seen as an extended time of self-focused exploration
and education in pursuit of optimally fulfilling relationships and
careers. Recognition of this new period is stronger than ever, but
an important question remains: should emerging adulthood be
considered a developmental stage, or a process?
In Debating Emerging Adulthood: Stage or Process? two pairs of
developmental psychologists take sides in a debate that is central
to the very concept of emerging adulthood. Arnett and Tanner argue
that as young people around the world share demographic
similarities, such as longer education and later marriage, the
years between the ages 18 and 25 are best understood as entailing a
new life stage. However, because the experiences of emerging adults
worldwide vary according to cultural context, educational
attainment, and social class, these two scholars suggest that there
may not be one but many different emerging adulthoods. An important
issue for this burgeoning area of inquiry is to explore and
describe this variation. In contrast, Hendry and Kloep assert that
stage theories have never been able to explain individual
transitions across the life course; in their view, stage
theories-including the theory of emerging adulthood-ought to be
abolished altogether, and explanations found for the processes and
mechanisms that govern human change at any age. This engaging book
maps out the argument of "stage or process" in detail, with
vigorous disagreements, conflicting alternatives, and some
leavening humor, ultimately even finding some common ground.
Debating Emerging Adulthood is an absolute must-read for
developmental psychologists as well as anyone interested in this
indisputably important time of life.
In recent decades, the lives of people in their late teens and
twenties have changed so dramatically that a new stage of life has
developed. In his provocative work, Jeffrey Jensen Arnett has
identified the period of emerging adulthood as distinct from both
the adolescence that precedes it and the young adulthood that comes
in its wake. Arnett's new paradigm has received a surge of
scholarly attention due to his book that launched the field,
Emerging Adulthood. On the 10th Anniversary of the publication of
his groundbreaking work, the second edition of Emerging Adulthood
fully updates and expands Arnett's findings and includes brand new
chapters on media use, social class issues, and the distinctive
problems of this life stage. In spite of the challenges they face,
Arnett explains that emerging adults are particularly skilled at
maintaining contradictory emotions-they are confident while being
wary, and optimistic in the face of large degrees of uncertainty.
Merging stories from the lives of emerging adults themselves with
decades of research, Arnett covers a wide range of topics,
including love and sex, relationships with parents, experiences at
college and work, and views of what it means to be an adult. He
also refutes many of the negative stereotypes about emerging adults
today, finding that they are not "lazy" but remarkably hard-working
in most cases, and not "selfish" but rather concerned with making a
contribution to improving the world. As the nature of American
youth and the meaning of adulthood further evolve, Emerging
Adulthood will continue to be essential reading for understanding
the face of modern America.
In recent decades, the lives of people in their late teens and
twenties have changed so dramatically that a new stage of life has
developed. In an original paper published in 2000, Jeffrey Jensen
Arnett identified this period, coining it "emerging adulthood," and
he distinguished it from both the adolescence that precedes it and
the young adulthood that comes in its wake. His new paradigm
received a surge of scholarly attention after his first book on the
topic launched the field, and both a flourishing society and
journal developed to further expand this area of research. Studies
and publications on emerging adulthood now abound, and the leading
research has yet to be organized into a single handbook that covers
the field. The Oxford Handbook of Emerging Adulthood is the first
and only comprehensive compilation spanning the field of emerging
adulthood. Expertly edited by Arnett, this Handbook is comprised of
cutting-edge chapters written by leading scholars in developmental
psychology. Topics include theoretical perspectives and structural
influences in the field; cognitive development during emerging
adulthood; family, friendship, and romantic relationships; sexual
identity and orientation; education and work; leisure and media
use; mental health; religious and political beliefs; positive
development; and substance abuse and crime, to name a few. Sure to
be the definitive resource for researchers, scholars, and students
studying emerging adulthood, this Handbook will pave the way for
new scholarship in this expanding area of inquiry and serve as an
excellent resource for the wider field of developmental psychology.
Emerging Adults in America: Coming of Age in the 21st Century
portrays the lives of young Americans between adolescence and young
adulthood, a distinct developmental stage that editor Jeffrey
Jensen Arnett describes as emerging adulthood. Over the past 40
years, the average age of marriage and parenthood has risen
dramatically, and the years from the late teens through the mid-20s
are no longer dedicated to settling into traditional adult roles.
Instead, the focus has shifted to pursuing higher education,
self-exploration, and shaping a future that best suits personal
goals and desires. Along with coeditor Jennifer Lynn Tanner, Arnett
has compiled a collection of chapters in this groundbreaking work
that cover a range of topics from relationships with parents to
views about love, sex, and marriage; from experiences in college to
those in the work place; and from religious beliefs to beliefs
about the concept of adulthood. This insightful book will be a
valuable resource for developmental psychologists, therapists, and
mental health practitioners who work with emerging adults and will
appeal to young people and their families.
This book paints a portrait of adolescent psychology in 4 major
regions: Africa/the Middle East, Asia, the Americas, and Europe.
Featuring 24 revised and updated chapters from the International
Encyclopedia of Adolescence (2007), readers are introduced to the
way the majority of the world's adolescents actually live. Most
contributors are indigenous to the country they review. As a whole
the book paints an engaging panorama of adolescent life around the
world, broadening students' cultural perspective. All chapters
follow the same template to make it easier to compare topics across
countries: Background (including demographics, ethnic diversity,
and political system), Period of Adolescence, Beliefs, Gender, the
Self, Family Relationships, Friends and Peers/Youth Culture, Love
and Sexuality, Health Risk Behavior, Education, Work, Media,
Politics and Military, and Unique Issues. Each chapter contains a
map and photos and a list of references and suggested readings. The
introductory chapter explains why the countries were selected and
introduces the book's common themes. The section on Africa and the
Middle East introduces students to teen life in Cameroon, one of
the few places left where adolescents go through formal puberty
rituals. In addition, readers learn about adolescent life in
Ethiopia, Israel, Morocco, Nigeria, and Sudan. Next we travel to
Asia -- China, India, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Here readers
see how economic growth in India and China is creating
opportunities for young people. In The Americas, readers are
introduced to life in Argentina, Canada, Chile, Mexico, Peru, and
the United States. The book concludes with adolescent life in
Europe including the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, the
Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and the UK. Intended for courses in
adolescent psychology, lifespan development, and/or cultural
(cross-cultural) psychology taught in departments of psychology,
human development and family studies, sociology, and education,
this book will also appeal to researchers and clinicians who study
or work with adolescents.
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