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Harkness, Sara; Super, Charles M. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2020
The seven papers in this issue address a variety of challenges that parents in several different cultural places encounter as they do their best to ensure their children's safe, happy, and successful development from infancy through middle childhood: infant sleep, developmental agendas, temperament, preschools, academic success, and learning to be…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Barriers, Cultural Differences, Child Development
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McAdams, Dan P. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2014
In a remarkably prescient chapter, Bertram Cohler (1982) reimagined the problems and the potentialities of psychological development across the life course as a distinctively human challenge in life narration. This chapter situates Cohler's original vision within the intellectual and scientific matrix of the late 1970s, wherein psychologists…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Midlife Transitions, Individual Development, Developmental Psychology
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Gestsdottir, Steinunn; Urban, Jennifer Brown; Bowers, Edmond P.; Lerner, Jacqueline V.; Lerner, Richard M. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2011
The positive youth development (PYD) perspective emphasizes that thriving occurs when individual [double arrow] context relations involve the alignment of adolescent strengths with the resources in their contexts. The authors propose that a key component of this relational process is the strength that youth possess in the form of self-regulatory…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Probability, Adolescent Development, Self Control
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McKeough, Anne; Malcolm, Jennifer – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2011
Research has shown that a hallmark of adolescent development is the growing capacity to interpret human intentionality. In this chapter, the authors examine developmental change in this capacity, which they have termed interpretive thought, in two types of stories, family and autobiographical, told by Canadian youth aged ten to seventeen years.…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Self Concept, Developmental Stages
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Lerner, Richard M.; Lerner, Jacqueline V.; Bowers, Edmond P.; Lewin-Bizan, Selva; Gestsdottir, Steinunn; Urban, Jennifer Brown – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2011
Both organismic and intentional self-regulation processes must be integrated across childhood and adolescence for adaptive developmental regulations to exist and for the developing person to thrive, both during the first two decades of life and through the adult years. To date, such an integrated, life-span approach to self-regulation during…
Descriptors: Children, Self Control, Adolescents, Child Development
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Narvaez, Darcia – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2010
Moral intelligence is grounded in emotion and reason. Neuroscientific and clinical research illustrate how early life co-regulation with caregivers influences emotion, cognition, and moral character. Triune ethics theory (Narvaez, 2008) integrates neuroscientific, evolutionary, and developmental findings to explain differences in moral…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Caregivers, Ethics, Moral Development
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Shulman, Shmuel; Nurmi, Jari-Erik – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2010
The chapter first introduces the concept of emerging adulthood as a period of life that is characterized by instabilities and fluctuations. Then, the role of goal setting and aspirations in individual development during this stage of life is discussed. Following this, seven chapters of the present special issue are introduced, and the ways in…
Descriptors: Goal Orientation, Individual Development, Young Adults, Adolescents
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Scharf, Miri; Mayseless, Ofra – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2010
Finding and cultivating a sense of authentic self is an important life goal for emerging adults. In collectivist cultures, youngsters might need to distance themselves to find and discover their authentic selves separate of the expectations of society and significant others. Creating an autonomous time bubble that focuses on the present allows…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Self Concept, Well Being, Young Adults
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Kobak, Roger; Rosenthal, Natalie L.; Zajac, Kristyn; Madsen, Stephanie D. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2007
Puberty alters the interplay of attachment, sexual, and affiliative systems; initiates the search for a peer attachment; and begins the reorganization of adolescents' attachment hierarchies.
Descriptors: Puberty, Attachment Behavior, Sexuality, Peer Groups
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Hanish, Laura D.; Barcelo, Helene; Martin, Carol Lynn; Fabes, Richard A.; Holmwall, Jennifer; Palermo, Francisco – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2007
How, when, and under what conditions do peer interactions contribute to variations in developmental trajectories along dimensions that are important to children's well-being? These compelling and fundamental questions have piqued the interest of developmental scientists and led to studies of the ways in which peers socialize and affect such…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Peer Groups, Interaction, Preschool Children
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Haegerich, Tamara M.; Tolan, Patrick H. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2008
Adolescence is a developmental period during which youth are at increased risk for using substances. An empirical focus on core competencies illustrates that youth are less likely to use substances when they have a positive future orientation, a belief in the ability to resist substances, emotional and behavioral control, sound decision-making…
Descriptors: Prevention, Adolescents, Competence, Decision Making
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Halpern, Carolyn Tucker – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2006
This chapter discusses biological contributions to adolescent female sexual development and, based on a developmental systems framework, suggests future research directions.
Descriptors: Sexuality, Adolescents, Developmental Stages, Females
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Lefkowitz, Eva S.; Stoppa, Tara M. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2006
This chapter provides an expanded view of parent- adolescent sexual communication and socialization in an effort to move beyond risk perspectives toward a consideration of other important aspects of sexual socialization.
Descriptors: Socialization, Sexuality, Interpersonal Communication, Parent Child Relationship
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Azmitia, Margarita; Ittel, Angela; Radmacher, Kimberley – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2005
Gender and self-esteem provide lenses through which early and late adolescents construct their narratives of ideal and actual friendships. These narratives provide a unique window into the dynamics of adolescents' friendships during school transitions.
Descriptors: Adolescents, Friendship, Late Adolescents, Self Esteem
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Weisner, Thomas S. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 1998
Describes child and human development as an eco-cultural project. Focuses particular attention to early development of trust and attachment relationships and the age 5-to-7 transition, wherein cultural goals and psychological well-being are achieved despite limited resources and socioeconomic constraints. (JPB)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context
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