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In this series, experts present collections of what they judge to be their most interesting publications. Professor Richard M. Lerner has been prominent in the application of developmental science across the lifespan, investigating relational development systems and their impact on positive youth development (PYD) and social justice.
Many adolescents in the United States are at risk from substance abuse, unsafe sexual practices, academic under achievement, crime and violence. What can be done to tackle these growing problems? This book suggests the need to focus on young people's development in relation to specific features of the individual's environmental 'context'.
This volume focuses on concepts central to the understanding of the key features of individuality which undergo significant transformations throughout the adolescent period: Personality, self, and ego. While rooted in distinct theoretical traditions, these three concepts, in combination, capture the core aspects of the formation of the individual's unique sense of self or identity, a psychosocial development fundamentally associated with adolescence. Consistent with the developmental-systems models of person-context relations at the forefront of current human development theory and research, the articles within this volume focus on the dynamic, reciprocal relations between youth and key socializing agents within their ecologies. Nevertheless, the articles represented in this volume illustrate that when attempting to understand the development of personality- and self-systems, scholars differ in the extent to which they place primary emphasis on the individual, on the context, or on the relationship between the two.For instance, while Bandura (1989) stresses the importance of the individual's sense of self-efficacy in creating beliefs about personal agency, Harter, Stocker and Robinson (1996) examine the link between approval from others (e.g., peers and key adults) and perceived self-worth, and Kenny and colleagues (1993) study the impact of emotional attachment to parents on adolescents' self concepts and depressive symptomatology. Variations in research designs are also represented within this volume. Several articles employ longitudinal designs to study continuities and discontinuities in personality, self, and ego development. Damon and Hart (1982) focus on the transitions fromchildhood into adolescence in their examination of self-understanding from infancy through adolescence. Other articles emphasize the changes in personality and self that accompany the transition from adolescence into adulthood: Tubman, Lerner, Lerner, and von Eye (1992) exam
To what extent are human beings capable of changing their physical characteristics and behavioural patterns over the course of their lives? This question has engaged scientists for decades: the fundamental issue is plasticity. In this wide-ranging book, Richard Lerner explores the relevant theory and empirical evidence in a variety of disciplines.
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