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Michelle Le; Jordan A. Booker – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: A Peer Relations Journal, 2024
Life storytelling is a key method for developing the self, and family storytelling is an important setting for parents and adolescents to jointly make sense of adolescent experiences. Early adolescence is a key time for building a clearer sense of self. We studied mother scaffolding and adolescent meaning-making as adolescents recounted turning…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Early Adolescents, Adjustment (to Environment), Story Telling
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Kerpelman, Jennifer L.; Pittman, Joe F.; Cadely, Hans Saint-Eloi; Tuggle, Felicia J.; Harrell-Levy, Marinda K.; Adler-Baeder, Francesca M. – Journal of Adolescence, 2012
Integration of adult attachment and psychosocial development theories suggests that adolescence is a time when capacities for romantic intimacy and identity formation are co-evolving. The current study addressed direct, indirect and moderated associations among identity and romantic attachment constructs with a diverse sample of 2178 middle…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Intimacy, Self Concept
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Liu, Yih-Lan – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2008
Three models of attachment relationships--the hierarchy model, the integrative model and the independent model--were compared in order to elucidate which best described the relationship between attachments to fathers versus mothers and its developmental consequences among 1,289 eighth grade students in Taiwan. These consequences included…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent Child Relationship, Attachment Behavior, Adolescents
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Moore, DeWayne; Hotch, Deborah F. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1981
An initial attempt to obtain normative data on adolescent home-leaving is represented. Young adults defined home-leaving as personal control, economic independence, residence, physical separation, school affiliation, dissociation, emotional separation, or graduation. The subjective meaning of these definitions is discussed. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Attachment Behavior, Higher Education, Parent Child Relationship
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Polmear, Caroline – Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 2004
The author reviews the main points in Freud's 1917 paper "Mourning and Melancholia" and relates them to the process of both normal and troubled adolescent development. Using clinical examples she illustrates the ways in which the processes Freud describes in melancholia operate in some disturbed adolescents such that instead of mourning the lost…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Grief, Depression (Psychology), Self Concept
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Kamptner, N. Laura – Adolescence, 1995
Analyzes treasured possessions and their meanings in adolescence, including their relation to those treasured during early life and their relation to self-identity. Subjects were 14- to 18-year-old high school students (n=249). Results showed that males' most treasured possessions embodied enjoyment and instrumental meanings, whereas females'…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Emotional Development
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O'Koon, Jeffrey – Adolescence, 1997
Examines older adolescents (N=167) perceived levels of attachment to parents and peers, along with their self-image. Results indicate that attachment to parents continues to remain strong into late adolescence for both males and females. Females had stronger attachment to peers whereas males had higher levels of self-image. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Attachment Behavior
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Adams-Price, Carolyn; Greene, A. L. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1990
In a study examining attachments to celebrity figures, 79 male and female fifth, eighth, and eleventh graders and college sophomores described themselves and their favorite celebrities. It was found that such attachments are equally important to males and females, and that gender and age affect the nature of the attachment. (DM)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Children
Hill, John P.; And Others – 1980
One of a series of papers which focus on 10- to 15-year-old adolescents, this publication describes these young people as they work through developmental tasks in environments (families, communities, peer groups, and schools) that are part of their daily lives. This description is used as a basis to accomplish the following: (1) a further…
Descriptors: Achievement, Adolescent Development, Annotated Bibliographies, Attachment Behavior
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Kroger, Jane – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1985
This study explores intrapsychic structures underlying Marcia's ego identity statuses in terms of separation-individuation patterns. Marcia's Ego Identity Status Interview and Hansburg's Separation Anxiety Test were administered to 140 undergraduates in New Zealand. As predicted, high statuses showed less anxiety than secure attachment or…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Attachment Behavior, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries
Young, Tami Lynn; Lichtenberg, James – 1996
The importance of family to identity is an accepted tenet of identity theories, though there is some dispute about the nature of this parental relationship and its facilitation of identity formation. This study investigated the relationship between the two developmental constructs of identity and attachment. Using the Identity Status Paradigm,…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Development, Emotional Development