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The Adolescent in society The Adolescent in society

The Adolescent in society - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Adolescent in society - PPT Presentation

Chapter 6 Adolescence in our society Adolescence is not a universal phenomenon It is an invention of modern society Adolescence is defined as the period between normal onset of puberty and the beginning of adulthood ID: 658527

dating adolescence social society adolescence dating society social challenges suicide sexual teenagers people adolescents teen pressure drug development teens

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Slide1

The Adolescent in society

Chapter 6Slide2

Adolescence in our society

Adolescence is not a universal phenomenon.

It is an invention of modern society.

Adolescence is defined as the period between normal onset of puberty and the beginning of adulthood.Puberty is the physical maturing that makes an individual capable of sexual reproduction.Slide3

Adolescence in our society

In American society adolescence is considered to run from age 12 to 19.

In pre-industrial societies, people go directly from childhood to adulthood.

They typically have ceremonies to celebrate this known as puberty rites.This usually occurs around 13-14Ceremonies include tattooing, filing of teeth, FGM, ect

…signify adulthoodThey then take on roles of an adultSlide4

Adolescence in our society

In the US adolescence did not exist prior to the Civil War.

Before the Civil War, children were treated like small adults.

Three factors in the development in adolescence.EducationExclusion from the workforceJuvenile- justice systemSlide5

Adolescence in our society

There are 5 main characteristics of adolescence:

Biological growth & development

Undefined statusIncreased decision makingIncreased pressuresSearch for selfSlide6

Adolescence in our society

Biological Growth and Development

The onset of puberty is found in every society

This means it is universalWe see physical growth in height and weightDevelopment of primary and secondary sex characteristicsSlide7

Adolescence in our society

Undefined status

Expectations for adolescence is usually vague.

Some adults treat adolescents as adults, while others treat them as children.For example you can get married at 16 with parental consent, but you cannot vote until you are 18.Slide8

Adolescence in our society

Increased decision making

Unlike children who have all their decisions made for them, you start making your own decisions.

You get to decide what courses to take in school.What sports/clubs you participate in.Whether or not you want to go to college.Slide9

Adolescence in our society

Increased Pressure

Typically adolescents are caught between parental pressure and peer pressure.

Adolescents also have pressure to do well in school.Adolescents also have pressure to go along with the latest fashions and fadsThere is pressure to form relationshipsSome adolescents have the pressure of having a job.Slide10

Adolescence in our society

The Search for Self

Adolescents are old enough to think about themselves and what they want in life.

Anticipatory socialization is learning the rights, obligations, and expectations of a role to prepare for assuming that role in the future.JobsDating

Club membershipSlide11

Teenagers and Dating

Dating

is the meeting of people as a romantic engagement.

Dating is found in societies that allow someone to choose their marriage partners.Some countries still arrange marriagesDating did not emerge in American society until around WWI.Slide12

Teenagers and Dating

Prior to the rise of dating in the US, interaction between men and women was restricted to courtship.

Courtship

differs from dating in that courtship’s express the purpose of marriage.The main goal of dating is entertainment and amusement.Dating sometimes leads to marriageSlide13

Teenagers and Dating

The rise of industrialization contributed greatly to the development of dating in the US

Moving away from farms to cities meant that men did not have to have land to marry.

This made people less dependent on their parents for economic security.Free public secondary education also helped pave the way for dating.Most public schools were coed.Slide14

Teenagers and Dating

The trend towards dating also emerged due to the rise of technology that gave young people more freedom

Automobiles

TelephonesThe emergence of women in the work force also helped in dating.Single men and women were in closer proximity.Slide15

Teenagers and Dating

Willard Waller conducted a sociological analysis of American dating patterns.

He concluded that casual dating was a form of entertainment, status attainment, and had little to do with mate selection.

Partners are picked based on looks, clothing, and popularitySlide16

Teenagers and Dating

Waller also found that status attainment is a form of homogamy.

Homogamy

is the tendency of individuals to marry people who have social characteristics similar to their own.Slide17

Teenagers and Dating

Why Date?

Dating serves several important functions in adolescence.

EntertainmentSocializationRole behaviorsBasic psychological needsStatus attainment

Spouse selectionSlide18

Challenges of Adolescence

Teenagers face important developmental tasks.

These tasks include:

Carving out an identityPlanning for the futureBecoming more independent Developing close relationshipsMost teens accomplish these tasks, while others do not.

Most sociological research on teenagers focus on issues such as Teenage sexual behaviorDrug abuseSuicide Slide19

Challenges of Adolescence

Teenage sexual behavior varies widely from society to society.

Some preindustrial societies allow adolescents to engage in sex before marriage.

Ex: Trobianders of the South PacificIn most Western societies, most follow traditional sexual norms and have norms against premarital sex.Many of these are beliefs are an outgrowth of Victorian and Puritan views of sexual morality.

These beliefs held up until the 1960’sSlide20

Challenges of Adolescence

In the 1960’s and 1970’s, the development of the birth control pill caused the development of a youth counterculture.

The Feminist movement

Aka the “sexual revolultion”This also led to the increase of in adolescent sexual behavior due to changing norms.Slide21
Slide22
Slide23

Challenges of Adolescence

The teenage birthrate is higher in America than in other industrialized societies.

Pregnancy rates have fallen among teens due to a push for sex

ed in the 1990s.Social scientists have developed a number of explanations for why adolescents engage in sex.Social, economic, and subcultural factors most often explain this.Family income

Parents’ marital statusReligious participationSlide24

Challenges of Adolescence

In general, teens from higher income, two parent households are less likely to engage in sexual activity compared to those from low-income, single parent households.

Teens who practice religion are more likely to abstain from sexual activity than those who are not religious.

Teens who have friends that engage in premarital sex are more likely to also engage in sexual activity compared to those who have friends that abstain.Early sexual behavior is also tied to risk taking behaviors such as delinquency and drug use.Slide25

Challenges of Adolescence

Consequences of early sexual activity include teen pregnancy and STDS

The CDC found that less than 1/3 of teenagers who are sexual active use birth control on a regular basis.

On average, one million teenage girls become pregnant.Teen pregnancy has a number of negative consequences such as: babies with low birthratesTeen parents are less likely to finish high school

Teen parents tend to earn less money in their lifetimeChildren of teen parents are more prone to learning difficultiesChildren of teen parents have an increased risk becoming teen parents themselves Slide26
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Slide28

Challenges of Adolescence

Drugs use dates back to the written histories of ancient Greece where they smoked opium

The Aztecs used hallucinogens

Heroin and cocaine use for non-medical purposes was common in the 1800’s and early 1900’sCocaine was an ingredient in widely used products such as:Soft drinks (Coke)Cough medicineHeadache powderSlide29
Slide30
Slide31

Challenges of Adolescence

Every year more violence associated with drug trafficking continue to grow.

A lot of the violence is due to turf wars between rival gangs who traffic drugs.

Adult criminal gangs control the drug trafficking in the US, but they use children and teens as “foot soldiers”.Children as young as 9 or 10 are used as lookoutsIn time these children rise in the gang hierarchy and eventually become drug dealersSlide32

Challenges of Adolescence

Crack cocaine is a

smokable

form of cocaine that is highly addictive.With the introduction of crack, drug related juvenile violence skyrocketed in the mid 1980’s.Heroin is now a rising epidemic in the US.Slide33
Slide34
Slide35
Slide36

Challenges of Adolescence

The chief factors of teen drug use are:

Having friends who use drugs

Having social and academic problemsLiving in a hostile and rejecting family settingSlide37

Challenges in Adolescence

The use of drugs and alcohol are contributing factors to other adolescent problems such as suicide.

The rate of suicide among young people has dramatically increased over the past few decades.

Suicide is the third leading cause of death for people between the ages of 15 – 24Motor vehicle deaths and homicide are the other two main causes of death for deaths in this age group.Slide38
Slide39

Challenges in Adolescence

When you think of the causes and consequences for suicide we tend to think of the individual, we typically associate suicide with depression.

However, sociologists are interested in the social causes of suicide.

According to Durkheim, social integration or the degree of attachment to social groups or to society as a whole is a major factor in suicide.People with high and low levels of social integration are the groups with high suicide rates.Slide40

Challenges in Adolescence

Individuals with high levels of social integration sometimes put the needs of the group members needs before their own personal needs.

For example, the Inuit in the Artic will walk into the wild to die once they become a burden on the group.

Individuals with low levels of social integration who commit suicide are more common that those with high levels of integration.Low levels of social integration are usually due to periods of social disorganization.Slide41

Challenges in Adolescence

Social disorganization result from factors such as:

Rapid social change

Increased geographical mobililtyWarNatural disastersSudden changes in economic conditions

Social bonds that give individuals a sense of group solidarity, such as family ties and religion, tend to weaken during periods of social disorganization.Slide42

Challenges in Adolescence

Predictors of teenage suicide include:

Alcohol and/or drug use

Triggering eventsRejection, pregnancy, family crisis, ectAge

SexFemales are 3 x as likely to attempt suicide compared to males, but males are more likely to succeed in suicide. population densityUnpopulated areas have higher rates of suicide

Family relations

Cluster effect

A well publicized suicide can trigger a “copy-cat” effect