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Schlossberg’s Transition Theory

Schlossberg’s Transition Theory. Jim Badger, Courtney Smith, Nick Hoover. Outline. History & Background of Theory Adult Development Theory What is a Transition? 3 Types of Transition 3 Adaptations 4 Factors for Coping Questionnaire & Group Discussions SAHE Applications. Schlossberg.

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Schlossberg’s Transition Theory

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  1. Schlossberg’sTransition Theory Jim Badger, Courtney Smith, Nick Hoover

  2. Outline • History & Background of Theory • Adult Development Theory • What is a Transition? • 3 Types of Transition • 3 Adaptations • 4 Factors for Coping • Questionnaire & Group Discussions • SAHE Applications

  3. Schlossberg Dr. Nancy K. Schlossberg • Bernard College, 1951 • B.A. Sociology • Teachers College, Columbia University, 1961 • Ed.D Counseling • University of Maryland • Professor Emeritus • Department of Counseling and Personnel Services

  4. History of the Theory • “A model for analyzing human adaptation” in The Counseling Psychologist, 1981 • Revised in 1989 and 1995 • Influenced by Erickson, Chickering, and several others

  5. Adult Development • Perspectives: • Contextual (impact of org on person) • Developmental (age, stage, domain) • Life Span (evaluate life experiences) • Transitional (cultural & social norms)

  6. The Theory • Transition: • Any event or non-event that results in changed relationships, routines, assumptions and/or roles • Positive or Negative • Perception is key • The transition must be analyzed

  7. Relevance • Insight into factors related to transition • the individual, the environment & the magnitude of the impact • Strategies to assist the transitioner • Learn of support available for coping • Learn to cope with life & the inevitable transitions

  8. 3 Types of Transition • 1st Type • Anticipated transition: • Occur predictably • Examples of college student anticipated transition?

  9. Anticipated Transitions Graduation From College, Living Situation (move)

  10. 3 Types of Transition • 2nd Type • Unanticipated transition: • Not predictable or scheduled • Examples of college student unanticipated transition?

  11. Unanticipated Transitions Deaths, Break-ups, Social Tragedies

  12. 3 Types of Transition • 3rd Type • Nonevents: • Expected transitions that don’t occur • 4 categories of non-events

  13. Nonevents con’t • Personal: individual aspirations • Ripple: experienced because of a nonevent of someone close • Resultant: caused by an event • Delayed: anticipation of an event that might still happen • -nonevents deal with probability and not so much possibility (event has to be likely to occur Examples of nonevent transitions?

  14. Job Offer, Promotion, Personal Life Milestones (marriage, children)

  15. Group Activity & Discussion • Case Studies • What kind of transition(s) for Amanda? • For Jacob? • For Pat?

  16. Context and Impact • Context- one’s own relationship to the transition and the setting • Work • Personal • Relationships • Impact- degree to which the transition alters daily life

  17. Transition Process • Growth or decline, occurs over a period of time • Series of phases including moving in, moving through, and moving out • Effectiveness in coping depends on “assets” & “liabilities” • Four Factors that influence coping, The 4 S’s • Situation • Self • Support • Strategies

  18. Situation • Trigger (what caused the transition) • Timing (social view of, is it on time or not? Good or bad?) • Control (what aspects of transition can the individual control? The transition itself or their reaction?) • Role change (has their role changed? Is it good/gain or bad/loss?)

  19. Situation con’t • Duration (permanent, temporary, or unknown?) • Previous experience w/ similar transition (able to cope before?) • Concurrent stress (other stressors?) • Assessment (who is seen as responsible for the transition & how is behavior affected by this perception?)

  20. Self • Personal & demographic characteristics (how does individual view life) • Socioeconomic status, gender, age, stage of life, health, ethnicity • Psychological resources (aid for coping) • Ego development, outlook, commitment, values

  21. Support • Types (intimate, family, friends, institutional/community) • Functions (affect, affirmation, aid, honest feedback) • Measurement (role dependent, stable & changing supports)

  22. Strategies • This is the Coping Response • Categories (modify situation, control meaning, manage stress in aftermath) • Coping modes (information seeking, direct action, inhibition of action) Multiple Methods + Flexibility = Effective Coper

  23. Appling the 4 S’s • Situation, Self, Support & Strategies • Revisit Case Studies

  24. Adaptation 3 variables • Individual’s perception of the transition • Characteristics of pre- and post-transition environments • Characteristics of the individual experiencing the transition

  25. Integrating with Counseling • Relationship building(listening skills) • Assessment(environment, resources & coping skills) • Goal setting(use 4 S’s; modify environment-situation; regain balance-self; support; develop a plan-strategy) • Interventions(change interpretation of meaning; assess assets-self; referral to support group-support; problem solving-strategy) • Termination & follow-up(review what has happened & plan for next step)

  26. Assessment Techniques • Transition Coping Questionnaire and Transition Coping Guide are 2 tools available • Consider the transition and answer Likert scale questions on the 4 S’s.

  27. Possible limitations • Not focusing on specific populations • GLBTQ • Students of color • Students with disabilities • International students

  28. Relevance to SAHE Professionals • Increase in adult learners • Transition can be the reason for enrollment in higher education • Aiding a transition can improve retention, involvement, alumni support • Support/assessment for college athletes (injury, not making team) • Taught to RAs, student org officers, student leaders, orientation/ FYE programs, graduating seniors • Numerous applications for adult students and for traditionally-aged students • Facilitates understanding and action for resolution & growth!

  29. Conclusion • Thank you for your time, participation, and attention! • Questions? • References: Chickering, A. W., Schlossberg, N. K. (1998). Getting the most out of college. Boston: Allyn and Bacon. Evans, N. J., Forney, D. S., Guido-DiBrito, F. (1998). Student development in college: Theory, research, and practice. San Francisco: Jossey- Bass. Schlossberg, N. K. (1989). Overwhelmed: Life’s ups and downs. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.

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