Chapter 11 PDF
Chapter 11 PDF
Human
Development
11 Notes
Human life completes its journey through various stages and one of the most vital
stages is adolescence. Adolescence is the period of transition from childhood to
adulthood and plays a decisive role in the formation of prosocial/antisocial adult.
All of us undergo this stage which poses many challenges and is full of excitement.
At the same time it demands adjustment on many fronts.
When we come to this world we are completely dependent upon others and learn
gradually to be independent. In India, the adolescents do most of the work themselves
but the final decision regarding various domains of life is taken by their parents. For
example, an adolescent wishes to enjoy movies but parents may force him/her to
complete study first. Parents claim that they have more practical knowledge and
experience and tend to treat adolescents like children.
This lesson shall help you understand the nature of adolescence and its challenges
and major tasks faced by the adolescents, the influences that shape their personality
and some of the important problems faced by the adolescents.
OBJECTIVES
After studying this lesson, you will be able to:
• explain the nature of adolescence as a developmental stage;
• enlist the developmental tasks encountered during adolescence;
• explain the physical development during adolescenc; and
• discuss gender roles and describe the phenomenon of generation gap.
The adolescence period in the Indian social system comes under Brahmacharya
(apprenticeship).This is the first ashram (stage of life) of development stages. In
this stage, the child learns the basic skills in relation to his future role as a responsible
adult.
It is a fact that all living beings pass through specific stages or phases of development.
Erikson believed that each stage of life is marked by a specific crisis or conflict
between competing tendencies. Only if individuals negotiate each of these hurdles
successfully they can develop in a normal and healthy manner. During this phase
adolescents must integrate various roles into a consistent self- identity. If they fail to
do so, they may experience confusion over who they are.
It is a well-known fact that delinquency rates soar during the period of adolescence,
that suicides become increasingly prevalent, that drug and alcohol addiction may
have their beginning, and that much general happiness exists. Adolescence is also a
period when satisfactory heterosexual adjustments are facilitated or hindered, when
career is planned and philosophies of life are molded.
Adolescence for both girls and boys is marked largely by social changes. Such factors
as when an adolescent leaves home, gets a job and can vote determine when his or
her transition from childhood to adulthood is accomplished. The length of this period Notes
is thus primarily a social phenomenon.
The problems adolescents face during the long period of growing up have both
biological and social roots. Physical changes and deviation can create many problems.
Society also creates problems for adolescents. Adolescents in western societies behave
differently than adolescents in eastern societies owing to varying social norms
expectations and family structure.
Activity 1
Learning by doing
List some issues on which you and your friends feel uneasy because you are
not free to do your job independently due to your parents’ interference. Discuss
with elders whether we can manage some negotiations to minimize the conflict
with parents.
Speed of transition: The changes during adolescence take place at very fast pace.
During no other period does the individual undergo such a sudden and drastic change
in such a short time period and at no other age is he less prepared to cope with the
problems that this change brings.
Length of transition: Those who mature rapidly (in term of physical growth), find
adjustment especially difficult. They are expected to behave like adults simply because
they look like adults. On the other hand, a prolonged adolescence also brings
problems. The adolescent gets into the habit of being dependent, and this, is difficult
to overcome later.
Discontinuities in training: Much of the stress and strain during adolescence is
due to the discontinuities in training. For example, the assumption of responsibility
during adolescence is difficult because the child has so far been trained to be dependent
and submissive.
Degree of realism: When the adolescent begins to look like an adult, (s)he is permitted
an added degree of freedom. If (s)he feels is not ready, either physically or
psychologically, to play the adult role, (s)he feels dissatisfied.
Motivation: The adolescent goes through a period of wondering how he or she will
meet the new problems the life presents. He or she would like to grow up but being
unsure of the ability to cope with the challenges of adulthood. So long as this feeling
of insecurity exists, there will be little motivation to make the transition in adulthood.
So for as adolescents are concerned, the developmental tasks present the vital
Adolescence is a long period, and many young adolescents have little motivation to
master the developmental tasks for their age. In the later period, however, they realise
that adulthood is rapidly approaching. This provides them the necessary motivation
Successful achievement of the developmental tasks for one period in life leads to
success with later tasks, while failure leads not only to personal unhappiness and
Notes disappointment but also to difficulties with later tasks.
One of the most characteristic features of adolescence is the increase in size i.e. in
height and weight. However, the beginning of adolescence, known as pubescence,
brings with it abrupt and psychologically significant physical changes. While many
of these physical changes, such as growth in height and deepening of the voices are
obvious and commonly known, others are hidden or less obvious but nonetheless
significant.
Surge in Growth
Toward the end of childhood, usually girls at about ten or eleven and boys at twelve
or thirteen, show a period of rapid growth in height and weight (general bodily
growth). This acceleration of growth is closely linked to the increased hormonal
output of the pituitary gland, which serves not only as the catalyst to produce growth
but also as the controller of other glands (i.e. adrenals, gonads, and thyroid) that
determine both tissue growth and function.
The rapid growth continues for a period of about three or four years, with the greatest
increment in growth coming at an average age of 12.6 years for girls and 14.8 years
for boys. During this period it is not uncommon for a child to grow as much as six to
eight inches in height and to gain 18 to 22 kilograms in a year’s time.
Skeletal Muscles: Muscles attached to bones, which bring about various types of
body movement like the limb movements.
Following closely on the heels of accelerated growth, the pituitary gland directs the
adrenal cortex and the gonads into more activity. Prior to this time, virtually equal
amount of androgenic (male) and estrogenic (female) hormones are produced for
both sexes by the adrenal cortex on the direction of anterior pituitary gland. Now an
increased amount of hormonal production differentiates the sexes; the males
producing more androgens, the females more estrogens.
Sex Hormones are substances secreted by the gonads for reproductive functions
and determination of secondary sex characteristics; e.g. estrogen in the female and
testosterone in male. Testosterone is the male sex hormone responsible for the
development of the male secondary sexual characteristics as they become sexually
mature, while in the female body, this role is played by estrogen.
Moreover, the genital and sex-appropriate tissues become more sensitive to these
sex specific hormones. The dawn of these changes is reflected in boys by beginning
of the enlargement of the testes. There follows in each sex a series of physical changes
whose appearance is highly predictable and whose sequence is unalterable. In girls
the enlargement of breast is followed by the growth of pubic hair, the menarche and
axillary hair. In boys, after the initial enlargement of the testes, there occurs pubic
hair, axillary hair, voice changes, and beard, in that order.
While many of these same changes occur among girls, their physical strength increases
at a slower rate, and, of course, never equals that of males. There are two reasons for
this superiority: (a) biologically, the male is favoured by larger shoulder breadth, a
bigger chest cavity, and better leg leverage; (b) culturally, girls receive little
encouragement for the development of strength. In fact they are encouraged in the
opposite direction-to be weak and dependent, or at least to pretend that they are.
TERMINAL QUESTIONS
1. What are the primary and secondary characteristics during adolescence?
2. What are the developmental tasks of adolescents?
3. Give a detailed account of major challenges faced during adolescence.
11.1
Notes
1. Period of transition, rapid physical and psychological changes, New social roles,
independence, faces conflicts.
11.2
1. d
2. a
11.3
1. Speed and length of transition, training, dependency, status, demands, degree of
realism, motivation.
2. Surge in growth, height and weight, skeletal and muscular growth, sex hormones,
sexual development, sex hormones, strength and skill.
11.4
1. Society’s beliefs about behaviours characteristic of males and females. Gender
consistency and behaviour of males and females.