Adolescence - A Period of Stress and Strain' - A Seminar Paper
Adolescence - A Period of Stress and Strain' - A Seminar Paper
Adolescence - A Period of Stress and Strain' - A Seminar Paper
ADOLESCENCE A PERIOD OF
STRESS AND STRAIN
- A SEMINAR PAPER
10 SEPTEMBER 2009
SUBMITTED BY:
Taxila Group
B.Ed. (2009 2010)
MENTOR:
Ms. Preeti Goel
GROUP MEMBERS:
Aparajita
Manisha Sadhnani
Preeti Sharma
Seema Kumari
Swati Priyadarshan
Archana Bhardwaj
Neeti Tyagi
Rakhi Bulani
Shabnam Kandwal
Swati Seth
Geeta
Neetu Singh
Rashmi Rathi
Shiney K. Jose
Vandana
Gunjan Singh
Poornima Rawat
Rashmi Sharma
Sujatha Rath
Yogmaya Pal
Abstract
Adolescence is one of the most fascinating and perhaps most complex stage of life, its breathtaking pace of
growth and change second only to that of infancy. Physically, children go from being small and compact one day
to being all legs and arms the next. They mature sexually. They also develop the capacity to reason in more
abstract ways, explore the concepts of right and wrong, develop hypotheses and think about the future. This is
the time when people take on new responsibilities and experiment with independence. Due to the complexities
and challenges faced by an individual during this stage, psychologists have termed it as a period of great stress
and storm, stress and strife. When adolescents are supported and encouraged by caring adults, they thrive in
unimaginable ways, becoming resourceful and contributing members of families and communities. School and
teachers play a very significant role in facilitating the growth and development of adolescents. Hence it is
critical for schools and teachers to understand the various physical, social and psychosocial changes that occur
in an individual during this period and ways to deal and help him/her navigate successfully through this stage.
This paper describes the challenges faced by adolescents, various changes that take place in their body and
behaviour as well as the ways in which school and teacher can facilitate them in reaching their full potential.
1.
Introduction
Ill be fifteen,
And soon a man!
The very thought of its delights me
But even now none dares to slight me
To look with scorn at me, none can
Treat me disdainfully or lightly
Im no pink-cheeked smiling laddie
Ive sprouted a moustache already
A gaffers mien is mine, its proud
My voice is gruff and also loud
And for a fight Im always ready
-Alexander Pushkin
1.1.
Definitions of Adolescence
Adolescence is typically a time of great stress and strain on the body, mind and emotions.
E.A. Peel (1956) is of the view, The adolescent is beset by problems of divided loyalties,
accentuated by the lack of adult privileges and responsibilities. He thus appears excessively
aggressive and then excessively shy, excessively affectionate and then quite suddenly
detached and cool. These are all problems of the stress and strains of transitions.
G.Stanley Hall also referred to the period of adolescence as a time of strum and drang or
storm and stress. This is explained by the fact that adolescents experience more lifechanging external and internal factors and situations than pre-adolescents. Hall attributed the
flood of hormones through the body and the internal changes that are experienced during this
period, a major contribution to stress. Some of the external changes, which can happen at any
age, could be family related, sickness, death, divorce, or trouble with the law. Some of the
other changes that occur during this period can be labelled as school-based, such as trouble
with grades, breaking up with a girlfriend or boyfriend, or being cut from a sports team.
Overall, there is more of a daily connection to negative events during the period of
adolescence than during the periods of pre-adolescence (LeFranois, 1996). Adolescents
begin to break free from their parents to find their own identities and in some cases that
break create a loss of childhood reality, or the protective nature of childhood.
Adolescence is also called a period of Challenges and Potential. An adolescent has
enormous physical, ideational and intellectual potential. Simultaneously, he is faced with
great challenges on account of his rapid physical growth, soaring as well as falling ideals, and
his search for identity as he is neither a child nor an adult, his growing sexual desires,
heightened emotions and lack of appropriate opportunities to channelise his enormous energy.
2
All these issues together make adolescence a stage of stress and storm. The formula no
longer a child-not yet an adult vividly expresses the transitional character of adolescent life.
It is a state in which the person has already broken with the happy age of childhood, but has
not yet found himself in adult life. That is why the adolescents mind is confused. The age of
adolescence is marked by psychological manifestations that have caused it to be described as
an age of crisis and transition.
An adolescent is faced with several alternatives on account of his conflicts and dilemmas.
To do or not to do attitude creates several problems. An adolescents notion of knowing it
all makes him confront several difficulties.
Some of the important adolescence problems and worries are briefly described underneath:
1. Becoming Independent: J.A.Hadfield (1962) is of the view, when we speak of
adolescent as growing up we mean that the youth is leaving behind the phase of
protective childhood and is becoming independent.
2. Age of ideals: Jean Piaget defines adolescence as, the age of great ideals and the
beginning of theories as well as the time of simple adaptation to life
3. Health and Adolescence: Adolescence is physically a very critical phase. Various
ailments that often manifest themselves are anaemia, nosebleed, nervousness,
palpitation of heart etc.
4. Sex and Adolescence: The onset of adolescence is marked by development of sexual
and reproductive organs, onset of menstruation etc. which are physically too many
issues for an adolescent to deal with. They also develop different sexual orientations
during this period.
5. Day dreams: Adolescents live in the fantasy world of love, achievement, security.
They exhibit exuberant imagination.
6. Sexual attraction: adolescents feel attracted towards the opposite sex. These feelings
manifest themselves in extreme passion.
7. Revolting tendency: The adolescent wants to free himself from bondage. There is a
tendency to revolt against authority.
by age 16 to 17 years. Pubic hair growth -- as well as armpit, leg, chest, and facial hair -begins in males about age 12, and reaches adult distribution patterns at about 15 to 16 years.
A concurrent rapid growth in height occurs between the ages of about 10.5 to 11 and 16 to 18,
peaking around age 14. Puberty is not marked with a sudden incident in males, as it is with
the onset of menstruation in females. The appearance of regular nocturnal emissions (wet
dreams), which may occur about every 2 weeks with the build-up of seminal fluid, marks the
onset of puberty in males. This typically occurs between the ages of 13 and 17 years, with the
average at about 14.5 years. Voice change in the male typically occurs parallel to penile
growth, and the occurrence of nocturnal emissions occurs with the peak of the height spurt.
Table 1: Physical changes during Adolescence
Boys
Increase in height
Growth spurt
Permanent teeth are in
Oily skin
Broadening of shoulders
Development of muscles
Change in voice
Appearance of hair on face, armpit and other
places
Manifestation of sexual desires
Masturbation
Girls
Beginning of menstruation
Enlargement of breasts
Increase in height
Broadening of hips
Growth spurt
Permanent teeth are in
Oily skin
Appearance of hair on armpit and other
places
Adolescents are often extremely sensitive and perceptive about their own physical appearance
and that of their friends. The discrepancies between their less than perfect self-images and the
glossy ideals that they are supposed to emulate can be a real source of anxiety.
d)
Medical check up: Medical examination of school children by the school doctor
should be made at suitable intervals to timely detect any serious problems arising in
adolescents.
Sex education: Drastic sexual changes take place during adolescence and to help
them understand these and have a healthy attitude about sexuality, sex education must
be a part of curriculum
e)
3.1.2.
Role of Teacher
)a
Appropriate seating arrangements and good lighting should be ensured to impress upon
the adolescents the importance of studying under healthy surroundings.
)b
Teachers of adolescents should understand components, principles, and theories of
adolescent physical and motor development, as noted in research.
)c
Teacher should motivate the students to take part in physical activities and sports.
)d
Teacher must also share the importance of physical health and nutrition with parents
during parent-teacher interactions.
)e
Teacher should act like a guide or a mentor to students so that they feel confident to ask
questions and concerns regarding their physical development.
2.
3.
4.
Friends or peers: This stage is often marked with increased friendly relationships.
During early adolescence, having close relationships and being accepted into a peer
group is very important. A childs actions can be greatly changed by peers or peer
pressure. They trust their peers more. More time spent with friends gives a child more
chances to try new things. He may try smoking, drinking alcohol, or sexual activity.
By middle adolescence, boys and girls start to become friends, which often lead to
dating.
Sex social relationships: Adolescence is marked with too much sex consciousness
resulting in sexual social relationships. Whereas opposite-sex interactions are
infrequent in childhood, they increase during adolescence.
Community: During adolescence loyalty becomes very pronounced and adolescents
are willing to sacrifice their selfish interests for the greater cause of the group, society
and nation
Family: In adolescence there is also an increasing desire for autonomy, of separating
from parents and becoming an independent adult. This desire may lead to heightened
family conflict (e.g., arguments about time spent with peers) and defiant behaviours
(e.g., affiliation with antisocial peers and engagement in delinquent activities). These
manifestations of autonomy striving have resulted in the frequent use of the term
"adolescent storm" in referring to this age.
Each stage involves a crisis of two opposing emotional forces. A helpful term used by Erikson
for these opposing forces is 'contrary dispositions'. Each crisis stage relates to a
corresponding life stage and its inherent challenges. Erikson used the words 'syntonic' for the
first-listed 'positive' disposition in each crisis (e.g., Trust) and 'dystonic' for the second-listed
'negative' disposition (e.g., Mistrust). To signify the opposing or conflicting relationship
between each pair of forces or dispositions Erikson connected them with the word 'versus',
which he abbreviated to 'v'. (Versus is Latin, meaning turned towards or against.)
Successfully passing through each crisis involves 'achieving' a healthy ratio or
balance between the two opposing dispositions that represent each crisis. For example a
healthy balance at crisis stage one (Trust v Mistrust) might be described as experiencing and
growing through the crisis 'Trust' (of people, life and one's future development) and also
experiencing and growing a suitable capacity for 'Mistrust' where appropriate, so as not to be
hopelessly unrealistic or gullible, nor to be mistrustful of everything. Erikson called these
successful balanced outcomes 'Basic Virtues' or 'Basic Strengths'
Where a person passes unsuccessfully through a psychosocial crisis stage they develop a
tendency towards one or other of the opposing forces (either to the syntonic or the dystonic, in
Eriksons language), which then becomes a behavioural tendency, or even a mental problem.
Erikson called an extreme tendency towards the syntonic (first disposition) a 'mal-adaptation'
and that towards the dystonic (second disposition) a malignancy. He identified specific
words to represent each of these at each stage.
Identity v Role Confusion, the fifth stage of Eriksons psychosocial development i.e.
An understanding of psycho-social development during this stage helps teachers and school to
ensure that appropriate measures are taken and opportunities be provided to the adolescents in
order to help them recognise their identity.
Conclusion
At about age 10, girls and boys begin the long trek through adolescence. With its jagged and
undefined paths, the fascinating journey can be demanding and disorienting, invigorating and
exciting. It marks the beginning of a quest for identity and for a way to find meaning and a
place in the world. As adolescents enter the larger world, they are increasingly influenced by
their peers and by adults other than their parents. They begin to explore their sexuality and to
stretch and test themselves intellectually, creatively and socially through sports and other
recreational activities. To support them in this exploration, adolescents need to develop life
skills skills in negotiation, conflict resolution, critical thinking, decision making and
communication. These can help them develop strong friendships, resolve conflicts peacefully,
cooperate in groups, build self-esteem and resist peer and adult pressure to take unnecessary
risks. A nurturing school and classroom environment can help develop these skills and teach
adolescents about citizenship, work skills and ethics, parenting and care giving.
References:
Agarwal J.C. (2007) Basic Ideas in Educational Psychology, Shipra Publications, New Delhi
Berk Laura (2007) Child Development, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi
Steinberg, L.; Levine, A. (1997) You and Your Adolescent: A Parent's Guide for Ages 10-20, : Harper
Collins Publishers Inc., Dunmore, PA
http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/pub_adolescence_en.pdf
Haber, D. and Blaber, C. (1995) Health Education: A Foundation for Learning. In: Content of the
Curriculum, pp. 99-127
Erikson, Erik. (1963) Childhood and Society, Norton, New York