Wesche et al. (2019) hypothesized that well-liked adolescents are more likely than their peers to participate in sexual activity. This could lead to adolescents with sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancy. Wesche et al. (2019) conducted a research to find connections between adolescent peer acceptance and sexual outcomes in adolescence and young adults. Results show that peer acceptance is associated with increased likelihood of sexual activity prior to the age of 16. By the age of 19, adolescents were more protective against having STI. This contradicts to the authors’ hypothesis. Adolescents who are well-liked is not associated with the risky young adults who have sex without condoms, have casual sex, and having more sex partners. As a matter of fact, well-liked adolescents are protective against contracting an STI by young adulthood.
Friday, March 5, 2021
Association Between Peer Acceptance and Sexual Behaviors from Adolescence to Young Adulthood
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
The Power of Teenage Girls' Friendships: What We Can Learn from Help-Seeking
By Taylor Decuir
The power of teenage girls’ friendships is widely recognized; this is reflected in buzz terms such as “girl squad'' used to describe female adolescent social networks. As parents, we recognize the increasing importance of friendships in the teen years due to the changing nature of friendships during the transition from childhood to adolescence. Children's friendships are limited to shared activities and interests, components of companionship, while adolescents' friendships become defined by closeness, a component of intimacy (Sears & Mcafee, 2017). An important feature in developing intimate friendships is help-seeking, the process of seeking guidance, advice, or emotional support. While help-seeking is a building block of female adolescent friendships, little research exists on the role of help-seeking in facilitating intimacy. Sears and Mcafee (2017), researchers from the University of New Brunswick, conducted a study to determine if a relationship existed between intentional help-seeking and emotional competence and self-disclosure, or the sharing of personal thoughts and information and if these through the nature of friendships based on companionship or closeness.
Sears and Mcafee (2017) hypothesized that teen girls would possess strong intentions of engaging in help-seeking. They also predicted that a direct correlation between emotional competence and self-disclosure would be present and that girls’ perceptions of their self-disclosure, emotional competence, and intentions would be indirectly influenced by the nature of their friendships based on whether the friendship is distinguished by closeness or companionship. Two hundred and twenty-two Canadian high school girls in ninth through twelfth grade, between the ages of fourteen and eighteen, were selected to participate in the study. Participants completed multiple surveys that required them to rate perceptions about their capacity for emotional competence and self-disclosure in friendships, perceptions about their closeness to their friends, and the likelihood they would seek help from friends. Based on responses, Sears and Mcafee (2017) concluded that while there was no evidence of a direct relationship between emotional competence and intentional help-seeking, they found a direct correlation between perception of emotional competence and the nature of friendships defined by closeness or merely companionship. Responses from the survey also indicated that girls were motivated to engage in help-seeking. This finding is consistent with previous research that emphasizes the preference of friends over parents as sources of advice and guidance for teens as their social networks expand.
It can be hard to watch your children rely on their friends for advice more, but this is a healthy sign of effective socialization and competence skills that will benefit your children later in life, regardless of gender. For example, when contrasted with girls, boys often have larger social networks consisting of companion-based friendships, often at the expense of intimacy. This results in boys having lower levels of self-disclosure when compared to girls. While this is probably unsurprising, considering society's expectations for boys to be less verbally expressive, boys should be encouraged to form intimate friendships the way we expect our daughters to do. Girls welcome help-seeking when they view their friendships as worthy emotional investments they can draw upon for emotional support. It is time boys have this opportunity, too.
References
Sears, H. & Mcafee, S. (2017). Seeking help from a female friend: Girls’ competencies, friendship features, and intentions. Personal Relationships (24)2, 336-349. https://doi.org/10.1111/pere.12180
Shutterstock. (2020). [Teen girls at a slumber party] [Photograph] Mom Junction.
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Will my kid choose to do the right thing and recycle?
By: Catherine Blanchard
When
it comes to adolescents, we can often worry about the decisions they are
making. Their autonomy is developing in new and exciting ways, but this brings
risk and uncertainty for those responsible for the adolescent. One of the
biggest worries for parents is whether or not their child will make morally
upright decisions. Lucky for us, Tobias Krettenauer at Wilfred Laurier
University researched how adolescents’ morality develops in the context of environmental
decisions (2017). By looking at and understanding his findings, we can better
understand how adolescents approach these specific decisions, apply these
findings to other moral decisions adolescents have to make, and thus take some
of the mystery out of the mysterious moral musings of minors.
So, why exactly was Krettenauer
trying to research the moral development of adolescents surrounding the environment?
For starters, there wasn’t much research about it to begin with! Previously
people had studied how adolescents generally approached the topic of environmental
concerns, but there wasn’t much information about the differences that occurred
as adolescents developed their moral decision-making abilities (2017). Knowing
this, Krettenauer got his crew together and preformed a cross-sectional study
which gathered 325 Canadian adolescents who ranged from early adolescents to late
adolescents and asked them a series of environmental questions. These questions
were aimed at having the adolescent engage in imaginative scenarios, some involving
their own family and others involving a hypothetical family, and then express their
feelings towards these scenarios (2017). With these questions, Krettenauer and
his crew were measuring their emotional responses to the scenarios, their moral
judgements concerning them, their overall appreciation for nature, and the
active steps they would take in engaging in behavior that would benefit the environment
(2017). What is interesting about their measurements is that they captured, not
only the adolescents’ thoughts and feelings about engaging in pro-environmental
behavior, but also their willingness and likelihood to put their money where
their mouth is and engage in these behaviors. Now, Krettenauer found that as adolescents
aged, they were more likely to fall off the environmental band-wagon. The
reason why, ironically enough, was because they saw it as a band-wagon or, in
other words, just a social convention that wasn’t actually obligatory. Another
reason, Krettenauer found, that caused this dip off in late adolescents was a
decrease in appreciation for nature (2017). All that being said, Krettenauer’s research
with Canadian adolescents and their feelings towards the environment can tell us a lot about the moral
developments of adolescents in general.
I’ll circle back around to that
daunting question all parents ask themselves: Will my child do the right thing?
If you’re looking at Krettenauer’s results and feeling hopeless, don’t be! If
the reason the adolescents break moral obligations is that they only see them
as social conventions, then the solution is written in the problem. As a
parent, you can help your adolescent understand that some things aren’t merely
social conventions. So, fear not and have hope that they’ll make good
decisions!
References
Krettenauer, T. (2017).
Pro-environmental behavior and adolescent moral development. Journal of Research on Adolescence (Wiley-Blackwell), 27(3), 581–593. doi: 10.1111/jora.12300
Zagnoli O. (Photographer). (2015,
Feb 27). n.d. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/01/opinion/sunday/is-the-environment-a-moral-cause.html
Tuesday, February 9, 2021
How your Parents Influenced your Identity
By: Hunter Doiron
In my angsty adolescence, I would have
never admitted that my parents were somehow affecting my own identity. I had
found my own friends, listened to my own music, did my own schoolwork, etc.,
and so I would have told you that I was controlling my own identity for myself.
Even though I was learning to form my own self-image and act true to myself, research has found that there is a link between one’s family security and satisfaction of psychological needs to one’s true self behavior as an adolescence (Goldner and Berenshtein-Dagan, 2016). This particular study began by hypothesizing that there was indeed a connection between high levels of family security and emotional fulfillment with higher levels of an adolescent experiencing both true-self knowledge and behavior (Goldner and Berenshtein-Dagan, 2016). They gave questionnaires to 302 total Israeli adolescents that asked both about their family life, such as marital status of their parents and meeting emotional needs from family, along with questions pertaining to how they viewed their true-self (Goldner and Berenshtein-Dagan, 2016). The researchers did find that their hypothesis was correct which means that even though I wanted to follow my own path to finding my identity, I should be giving credit to my parents for giving me a secure and stable home life along with allowing me to experience emotional satisfaction whenever necessary.
Me graduating high school thinking
that I was forming my own identity by myself, but now I look back and see that
my parents were right there behind me always helping me discover my true-self
potential.
The researchers say their goal was, “to
shed light on the construct of the true self during early and middle
adolescence by exploring the contribution of security within the family and
satisfaction of basic psychological needs to these adolescents’ true-self
behavior” (Goldner and Berenshtein-Dagan, 2016). Similarly, my goal in this
blog is to share their findings so that you reading this can look back on your
adolescent days and see where maybe your parents actually did help you find
your identity or even where you still wish they would have done better.
Regardless, most of us will be parents one day ourselves, or maybe you’re
already one, so by having a solid understanding of a parent’s role in helping
their children discover themselves, we can all better strive to fulfill that
crucial component of our potential or actual children’s lives.
I’m sure if I ever have kids they will hang out with their own friends, listen to their own music, and do their own school work, but that won’t ever stop me from doing my best to give them the safe and secure environment they deserve to foster their own true-self image and behavior just like my parents did for me.
References
Goldner, L.,
& Berenshtein-Dagan, T. (2016). Adolescents’ true-self behavior and
adjustment: The role of family security and satisfaction of basic psychological needs. Merrill-Palmer Quarterly (1982-),
62(1), 48–73. https://doi.org/10.13110/merrpalmquar1982.62.1.0048
Monday, January 11, 2021
Writer's Guidelines
The purpose of this blog is to provide readers with credible, accurate, and reliable information about adolescent development and to help others better understand this dynamic period of development.
Topics: We welcome posts on psychosocial issues and contexts that impact adolescent development.
Audience: Our blog is intended to be helpful for non-experts, such as parents and other adults who work closely with adolescents, including foster parents, adoptive parents, and grandparents raising grandchildren.
Post types include:
- “Quickie” - 75-100 word summary of a very recent (last 2 years) empirical article.
- “Research Spotlight” - 400-500 word summary of a recent (last 5 years) empirical article.
- “Adolescents in Pop Culture” - 400-500 word examination of a fictitious or real adolescent portrayed in the media (series or movie) using multiple research articles.
- “Fact Checker” - 400-500 word examination of a claim you find in the media. Think of this as “I read/heard that _____, but in reality the research says _____”.
- “Hot Topic” - 400-500 word review of a particular research area that summarize findings from a handful of articles (e.g., “Top 10 reasons for _____” or “A Step by Step Guide for _____”).
- “Q&A” - Post an interesting question about adolescent development, then provide a 400-500 word answer backed up by research. This can take the form of an advice column (i.e., write a fictional “Dear Researcher” letter to then respond to).
Research: Posts are based on peer-reviewed, empirical research.
Documentation: Posts use APA-style for in-text citations and references.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
About this Blog
This blog was created to provide a place to showcase evidence of significant learning by students in PSYC 3320 Psychology of Adolescence.
I invite you to read and comment on the posts published in this blog and to contemplate how you might use the research reported in the blog to better understand adolescent development.
Go Get Some Sleep!
By: Hunter Doiron I will be the first to admit that I struggle sleeping when I should. Research from Rusnac et al. (2019) looked at th...
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By Taylor Decuir Most teens imagine bright futures; however, for teens with anxiety, this is harder. Ramsgaard et al. (2019) investi...
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By: Hunter Doiron When I was in high school, I was expected to go to college by others and myself. A recent study in Sweden looked at how a...

