1 / 21

Adolescence 8th edition

Adolescence 8th edition. Chapter Ten: Intimacy. By Laurence Steinberg, Ph.D. Chapter 10 Overview. What are the major theoretical perspectives on the development of intimacy? Sullivan’s Interpersonal Theory Erikson’s View of Intimacy How does intimacy develop in adolescence?

nadel
Download Presentation

Adolescence 8th edition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adolescence8th edition Chapter Ten: Intimacy By Laurence Steinberg, Ph.D.

  2. Chapter 10 Overview • What are the major theoretical perspectives on the development of intimacy? • Sullivan’s Interpersonal Theory • Erikson’s View of Intimacy • How does intimacy develop in adolescence? • How does dating and romantic relationships relate to intimacy? • How does intimacy impact psychosocial development during adolescence?

  3. Why Is Intimacy An Adolescent Issue? • Intimacy in adolescence does not necessarily have a sexual or physical component • True intimacy is characterized by openness, honesty, self-disclosure, and trust • Intimacy becomes an important concern because of changes including puberty, cognitive changes, and social changes • Not until adolescence do truly intimate relationships first emerge Insert DAL photo

  4. Theoretical Perspectives on Adolescent Intimacy Sullivan’s Theory of Interpersonal Development • Emphasized the social, rather than the biological aspects of growth, and that psychological development can be best understood in interpersonal terms • Theory focuses on transformations in relationships with others • Four stages of interpersonal needs over the course of adolescence

  5. Theoretical Perspectives on Adolescent Intimacy • Sullivan’s Developmental Progression • Infancy: need for contact and for tenderness • Early childhood: need for adult participation • Middle childhood: need for peers and peer acceptance • Preadolescence: need for intimacy • Early adolescence: need for sexual contact and intimacy with opposite-sex peer • Late adolescence: need for integration into adult society

  6. Theoretical Perspectives on Adolescent Intimacy • Erikson’s View of Intimacy • Crisis of Identity vs. Identity Diffusion is prominent during adolescence • Crisis of Intimacy vs. Isolation is prominent during early adulthood • In a truly intimate relationship, two individuals’ identitiesfuse, neither person’s identity is lost • Adolescents must establish a sense of identity before intimacy, or else they will experience pseudointimacy in their relationships

  7. Theoretical Perspectives on Adolescent Intimacy • Erikson and Sullivan: Conflicting Views? • Sullivan: the development of intimacy leads to the development of a coherent sense of self in late adolescence • Erikson: one must have a clear sense of who one is in order to avoid becoming lost in a relationship with someone else • Contemporary research shows that these are complementary, not competing tasks during adolescent development

  8. Attachment in Adolescence • Attachment is defined as a strong and enduring emotional bond (usually formed first in infancy) • Three types of attachment based on security • Secure – characterized by trust • Anxious-avoidant – characterized by indifference • Anxious-resistant – characterized by ambivalence

  9. Attachment in Adolescence • An “internal working model” of relationships develops during childhood • Do we feel trusting or apprehensive in relationships with others? • Do we see ourselves as worthy of others’ affection? • Working models provide a set of expectations we draw from when forming close (intimate) relationships

  10. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Changes in the Nature of Friendship • Companionship appears before adolescence • Intimacy emerges later • Early adolescence • Self-disclosure and trust emerge as dimensions of friendship

  11. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Changes in the Nature of Friendship • Conflicts that adolescents have with friends • Older adolescents typically have conflicts over private matters • Younger adolescents typically have conflicts over public disrespect

  12. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Changes in the Display of Intimacy • Adolescents become more knowledgeable about their friends • Adolescents become more responsive to close friends and less controlling • Friends become more interpersonally sensitive and show more empathy • Friends resolve conflicts more frequently by negotiation or disengagement, not coercion

  13. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Sex Differences in Intimacy • Girls’ relationships are more intimate than boys’ across many different indicators • Girls disclose more to their friends • Girls are more sensitive and empathic to friends • Girls are more concerned with trust and loyalty • Sex differences in intimacy differ across ethnic groups

  14. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Changes in the “targets” of intimacy • Sullivan hypothesized that • intimacy with peers replaced intimacy with parents • Intimacy with peers of the opposite sex replaced intimacy with same-sex friends • However, research shows that new targets of intimacy are added to old ones

  15. How Does Intimacy Develop in Adolescence? • Changes in the “targets” of intimacy • Teens experience different types of intimate relationships with parents and peers • Parent-adolescent relationships • Imbalance of power, teens receive advice • Adolescent peer relationships • Mutual, balanced, equal exchanges

  16. Dating and Romantic Relationships in Adolescence • High school dating no longer functions as mate selection, now recreational • Romantic relationships are very common, in the past 18 months • 25% of 12-year-olds reported having one • 50% of 15-year-olds reported having one • 70% of 18-year-olds reported having one

  17. Dating and Romantic Relationships in Adolescence • Dating and the Development of Intimacy • Dating can mean a variety of things • Group activities involving boys and girls • Casual dating in couples • Serious involvement in a steady relationship • Transitions into and out of romantic relationships can be difficult for adolescents • Breakups are the leading cause of depression

  18. Dating and Romantic Relationships in Adolescence • Four Phases of Adolescent Romance • Infatuation – discover an interest in socializing with prospective romantic partners (focus on learning about oneself) • Status – focus on establishing, improving, or maintaining peer group status • Intimate – focus on beginning to establish true and meaningful attachments to romantic partners (become involved in the emotional side of romance) • Bonding – focus on commitment (not necessarily marriage) and caring more than passion and pleasure • These stages may not apply to sexual-minority youth because they are less likely to have a public relationship

  19. Dating and Romantic Relationships in Adolescence • Impact of Dating • Serious dating before age 15 has a stunting effect on psychosocial development • Adolescent girls who do not date at all show • retarded social development • excessive dependency on parents • feelings of insecurity

  20. Intimacy and Adolescent Psychosocial Development • During adolescence, friends • serve as sounding boards for future plans • provide advice on a range of identity-related matters • contribute to adolescents’ self-esteem • Individuals with satisfying close friendships do better than those without them, in adolescence and in adulthood • Psychologically healthy adolescents are better able to make and maintain close relationships with others

More Related