Introduction
During
adolescence, as children morph from childhood to adulthood, change
takes place through a process called puberty. Puberty begins around the
age of eight to twelve and is triggered by hormonal changes but is not a
process that concludes over night. The onset of puberty arrives under
unique circumstances. It is influenced by a variety of different
variables and its physical side is generally more visible than it’s
cognitive or psychosocial side. Despite popular belief, the
finalization of puberty can surpass the teen years completely and
terminate well into the twenties. (Annenberg, 2007)
In
this stage of life, Biological, Cognitive, and Psychosocial Development
are noted as physical, educational, sexual, emotional, and personality
enhancements that continue to help create new milestones. On the
following pages, we shall discuss these different areas, provide
examples and show how the development of a child/adolescent aged eight
through nineteen progresses. By the end of this document, one should be
able to provide a simple description of this process with little to no
difficulty.
Biological Development
Biological
Development involves changes that are physical in nature. Through the
adolescence years, these changes include internal as well as external
body changes and are stimulated by hormonal development. These changes
take place approximately two years’ earlier in females than they do in
males. Therefore, since this stage of development is gender specific, we
shall separate the two making it easier to explain.
In
General, with girls, the onset of puberty begins around the age of
eight to twelve. Where as with boys, there is a two-year delay that sets
puberty at approximately age twelve to fourteen. During this time, a
girl’s ovaries begin to produce eight times more estrogen than ever
before. A boy’s testis generates eighteen times more testosterone than
ever before. (Annenberg, 2007) This rise in estrogen and testosterone
causes the body to under go transformations such as increased height,
weight, and musculature change. Pubic, under-arm and leg hair begin to
blossom (Lewis, 2007). With girls, hips begin to spread, and breasts
begin to develop. With boys, voices deepen and ejaculation becomes
possible. (Annenberg, 2007) This process seems to lead girls to
menstruation around age thirteen and full facial hair for males around
age 18 as their physical adulthood begins. It should be noted however,
that menstruation can begin at any time during puberty and it is not
abnormal for a young lady to begin earlier or later than her peers.
Over
all, Boys and girls of all ages can experience a variety of issues that
can delay and or speed the maturity process. Some biological variations
include, but are not limited to, things such as stress, body mass, and
disorders such as anorexia. Stress can cause many changes in the body.
It can slow down the creation of hormonal substances or speed the
process. Stress and/or anorexia can cause delay menstruation, cause
irregular bleeding, or temporarily end the process all-together. Body
mass comes into consideration because most girls begin to enter puberty
around the time they reach one hundred pounds. Heavier girls tend to
reach puberty faster than thinner girls and the more actively involved
in heavy sports a girl is will also contribute to the arrival of
hormonal change. Despite the delayed possibilities, most adolescents
reach puberty in average times. Generally, girls will reach physical
adulthood by age sixteen and males by eighteen.
Cognitive Development
Cognitive
development describes the intellectual or educational side of human
growth. It includes but is not limited to the thinking process,
perceptual ability, and communication. During age ten to twelve logical
thought processes become abstract thinking, planning and memory skills
improve, the long-term memory strengthens, and language skills develop
into more complex and concrete forms of verbal communication. By age
fifteen, (Annenberg, 2007) an adolescent’s formal operational reasoning
takes hold and the capacity for the abstract and scientific thought
process emerges. (Health, 2006) Basically, they become capable of
thinking in a new critical, self-conscious ways. However, it is around
this age that sarcasm may seem to slip into the picture as the child
begins to grasp new concepts and becomes less sincere in their choice of
words. This lasts a relatively short time, considering that by age
sixteen to nineteen (Annenberg, 2007), coping skills develop substance
as they learn to integrate rules and consequences into their decision
making, and adolescents become able to better manage their problems and
situations on a day to day bases. (Health, 2006) Basically, this is
saying that the character of the youth becomes that of an adult and
their intellectual skills mirror such improvements.
Psychosocial development
Psychosocial
Development describes more intimate areas of human development. These
intimate areas include the emotional character, personality, and the
ability to form and maintain interpersonal relationships. Many outside
influences as well as the above biological changes influence these
important traits during adolescents.
Between
the ages of ten and twelve, things begin to become complicated for the
child. Not only is he or she facing their ever changing bodies, raging
hormones, other normal day to day challenges, they begin to notice other
things as well. Peers begin to split onto cliques, stereotypes, and
prejudice seems to become more obvious, and a new sexual awakening
challenges their sense of morals, and values (Lewis, 2007). These
drastic changes can play an important role in the way a child portrays
his or her self. Matter a fact; this can be the beginning of an
emotional roller coaster for both the child and his or her parents.
Over
all, a strong support system can make an extreme difference in an
adolescent’s life. If a strong system is in place, it is more likely
that a thirteen to fifteen year old teenager will feel more comfortable
asking advice, thus creating a stronger self-esteem and enabling the
individual to make more responsible choices. (A proper support system
will assure the teen is educated in all areas of potential issues, along
with support the ones at hand) (Cleveland, 2006). When a child
maintains this type of relationship with at least one adult, they gain
self-confidence, and are more likely to separate themselves from
conflict, invest in healthy friendships, value education, hold on to
their virtue, and decline offers of potentially harmful substances. Not
to mention, the more positive the adolescent experience is for the teen,
the more positive it will be for the parent and society as a whole.
Ok,
So, Not all adolescent aged individuals can cruse through life without
chaotic moments and although parental involvement plays a huge role in
adolescent success it’s not the only element that influences behavior.
Matter a fact; many responsible parents have faced heartache when their
child has made bad choices, as well as, negligent and/or abusive parents
who managed to gain responsible offspring with little to no guidance at
all. This is where other variables come into play. Biological,
sociological, or psychological dysfunctions, and peer pressure enhance
the chances of adolescent productivity and negativity (Annenberg, 2007).
Hormonal
changes can create issues such as depression, anxiety, eating disorders,
etc. These issues (among others) can lead to such actions as alcohol
and drug abuse, suicide attempts, eating disorders, and other deviant
behaviors. Teens in these predicaments are also more likely to engage in
unprotected adolescent sexual encounters than those who maintain strong
support systems and healthy self-images. (Which of course is a matter
of life and death) These effects are multiplied when a teen also faces
societal issues such as publicly humiliating situations including being
subjected to bullying or hazing, peer pressure, and the lack of a
healthy support system. Children who face these situations tend to seek
attention from unhealthy sources and need immediate intervention. Common
signs these situations are, lack of conversation, decreased activities,
shakiness, obviously weight gain or loss, lack of appetite, over
eating, pupil dilation, and unexplainable marks (among others).
(Cleveland, 2006) Parents should pre-educate themselves and at the first
sight of these signs provide a comfortable setting for one on one
conversation between parent and child and if necessary seek professional
advice from a qualified therapist to ensure the safety of the
situation.
Conclusion
The
Adolescent era has a lot of incoming and out going obstacles. Each
individual child has a unique personality and should be treated as such.
Parental support continues to play an important role but is not the
only influence. Changing bodies, raging hormones, societal changes, and
peer pressure provide obstacles that may lead to deviant if not
dangerous or even fatal results if not closely monitored and support
granted on an as needed basis. Positive feedback is always helpful and
provides guidance in ways that nothing else can. Over coddling is not
necessary. Basically, since this is a time of learning and mistakes;
unconditional love, guidance, and support are key elements for success.
Remember, we were all kids at one time and we all made mistakes. We all
sought individuality. We all deemed ourselves invincible. We all
learned that most mistakes are small enough, easily forgotten, and
fixable. We may live in a different age, but, even body piercing can be
removed; hair re-grown or dyed, and above all adolescent’s conquered if
our teens are shown the way. Again, The insanity of adolescence is only
temporary with limited to no adverse effects.. When it’s over, our
children will beat the odds and become mature adults. After all, WE DID!
References
Annenberg Media (2007). Discovering Psychology. Age 10-12. Retrieved Jan. 25, 2007
From WGBH Educational Foundation website:
http://www.learner.org/discoveringpsychology/development/10_12.html
Annenberg Media (2007). Discovering Psychology. Age 13-15. Retrieved Jan. 25, 2007
From WGBH Educational Foundation website:
http://www.learner.org/discoveringpsychology/development/13_15.html
Annenberg Media (2007). Discovering Psychology. Age 16-19. Retrieved Jan. 25, 2007
From WGBH Educational Foundation website:
http://www.learner.org/discoveringpsychology/development/16_19.html
Cleveland Clinic, The. (2006) Social Development During the Teen Years.
Retrieved Jan 24, 2007 From: The Cleveland Clinic Information Center Website:
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-i info/docs/2700/2707.asp?index=9983
Health topic contract (2006). Adolescent Medicine; Adolescent development.
Retrieved Jan. 28, 2007 From University of Virginia Health Systems website:
http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/UVaHealth/peds_adolescent/cogdev.cfm
Lewis, Joe (2007). The Physiological and Psychological Development of the Adolescent.
Retrieved Jan 26, 2007. From Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute website:
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1991/5/91.05.07.x.html#b
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