Development as Action in Context [electronic resource] : Problem Behavior and Normal Youth Development / edited by Rainer K. Silbereisen, Klaus Eyferth, Georg Rudinger.
Material type:
TextPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1986Edition: 1st ed. 1986Description: X, 322 p. 1 illus. online resourceContent type: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783662024751
- 150 23
- BF1-990
A. Introduction -- I. Development as Action in Context -- B. Approaches to Managing Life-Tasks in Adolescence -- II. Problem Identification and Definition as Important Aspects of Adolescents’ Coping with Normative Life-Tasks -- III. Puzzles in the Study of Daily Hassles -- IV. Social Behavior Problems in Adolescence -- V. Place for Development: Adolescents, Leisure Settings, and Developmental Tasks -- VI. Children’s and Adolescents’ Conceptions of Adulthood: The Changing View of a Crucial Developmental Task -- VII. Future Time Orientation and Its Relevance for Development as Action -- VIII. Prosocial Motives from 12 to 18: A Comparison of Adolescents from Berlin (West) and Warsaw -- C. Development and Problem Behavior -- IX. Resourceful and Vulnerable Children: Family Influence in Hard Times -- X. Adolescents’ Changing Values in a Changing Society -- XI. Processes of Peer Influences in Adolescence -- XII. The Coping Function of Adolescent Alcohol and Drug Use -- XIII. Adolescent Problem Drinking: Psychosocial Aspects and Developmental Outcomes -- XIV. Structural Modeling with Large Data Sets and Non-Normal Continuous Variables -- D. Prospects -- XV. Recent Advances in Research on the Ecology of Human Development -- Author Index.
Most contributions to this volume originated as papers given at an inter national conference on Integrative Perspectives on Youth Development held in Berlin (West) in May, 1983. This conference was part of a 6-year longi tudinal research program on the causes of substance use among adolescents in Berlin, which is now in its fourth year. The conference title deliberately did not refer to substance use. However, its relevance to an explanation of drug-related problem behavior was made evident to everyone invited to the conference. The search for integrative perspectives in youth development originated in a dilemma that became obvious during the planning of intensive research on concomitants of substance use. In the methodology for research on youth development, there were two lines of thought that seemed completely unre lated to each other: One line of thought was oriented toward the person, leaving situational aspects aside, while the other concentrated on ecological or situational determinants and thus neglected the aspects of development and internal processes. The integration of both these directions seemed to be an unusually promising approach for any project that aimed to understand changes in the individual within a rapidly changing urban setting. The best way to come closer to a resolution of that dilemma seemed to be an intensive exchange between the American and European scientific communities on this issue.
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