Values Development
Values Development
Described personality development as a series of stages. Of these stages, Freud believed that
early childhood was the most important. He believed that personality developed by about the
age of five. In his well-known stage theory of psychosexual development, Freud suggested that
personality develops in stages that are related to specific erogenous zones. Failure to
successfully complete these stages, he suggested, would lead to personality problems in
adulthood.
Like Freud, Erik Erikson believed in the importance of early childhood. However, Erikson
believed that personality development happens over the entire course of a person’s life. In the
early 1960s, Erikson proposed a theory that describes eight distinct stages of development.
According to Erikson, in each stage people face new challenges, and the stage’s outcome
depends on how people handle these challenges. Erikson named the stages according to these
possible outcomes:
Erikson’s theory is useful because it addresses both personality stability and personality
change. To some degree, personality is stable, because childhood experiences influence
people even as adults. However, personality also changes and develops over the life span as
people face new challenges. The problem with Erikson’s theory, as with many stage theories of
development, is that he describes only a typical pattern. The theory doesn’t acknowledge the
many differences among individuals.
Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development
Stag Typical Age
Conflict Faced Major Challenge(s)
e Range
Having basic needs met, attaching to
1 Trust vs. mistrust First year of life
people
Autonomy vs. shame and
2 1–3 years Gaining independence
doubt
3 Initiative vs. guilt 3–6 years Acting in a socially responsible way
Competing with peers, preparing for adult
4 Industry vs. inferiority 6–12 years
roles
5 Identity vs. role confusion Adolescence Determining one’s identity
6 Intimacy vs. isolation Early adulthood Developing intimate relationships
Generativity vs. self-
7 Middle adulthood Being productive
absorption
8 Integrity vs. despair Old age Evaluating one’s life
Compulsive,
Self control w/o self-restraint
1½ Autonomy loss of self esteem or
2. Early
to 3 vs Shame compliance.
childhood
y/o & doubt Ability of cooperate
& express oneself Willfulness &
defiance.
Lack of self-
confidence.
Learns to become
Pessimism,
assertive
3 to Initiative fear of
3. Late
5 y/o vs guilt wrongdoing.
childhood Ability to evaluate
one’s own behavior
Over-control
& over-
restriction.
Loss of hope,
Learns to create,
sense of
develop &
being
6 to Industry manipulate.
4. School mediocre.
12 vs
Age
y/o Inferiority Develop sense of
Withdrawal
competence &
from school &
perseverance.
peers.
Feelings of
Coherent sense of confusion,
5. 12– Identity vs
self. indecisivenes
Adolescen 20 role
s, & possible
ce y/o confusion Plans to actualize
anti-social
one’s abilities
behavior.
Impersonal
Intimate relationships.
relationship with
18- Intimacy Avoidance of
another person.
6. Young
25 vs relationship,
Adulthood
y/o isolation Commitment to career or
work and lifestyle
relationships. commitments
.
Self-
indulgence,
25- Generativi self-concern,
Creativity,productivi
7. Adulthoo 65 ty vs lack of
ty, concern for
d y/o stagnation interests &
others.
commitments
.
Acceptance of
65
worth & uniqueness Sense of
y/o
Integrity of one’s own life. loss,
to
8. Maturity vs despair contempt for
deat
Acceptance of others.
h
death.
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
While conducting intelligence tests on children, Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget began to
investigate how children think. According to Piaget, children’s thought processes change as
they mature physically and interact with the world around them. Piaget believed children
develop schema, or mental models, to represent the world. As children learn, they expand and
modify their schema through the processes of assimilation and accommodation. Assimilation is
the broadening of an existing schema to include new information. Accommodation is the
modification of a schema as new information is incorporated.
Example: Suppose a young boy knows his pet parrot is a bird. When he sees a robin outside
and calls it a bird too, he exhibits assimilation, since he broadened his bird schema to include
characteristics of both parrots and robins. His bird schema might be “all things that fly.” Now
suppose a bat flaps out at him one night and he shrieks, “Bird!” If he learns it was a bat that
startled him, he’ll have to modify his bird schema to “things that fly and have feathers.” In
modifying his definition, he enacts accommodation.
Example: If a three-month-old baby sees a ball, she’ll probably be fascinated by it. But if
someone hides the ball, the baby won’t show any interest in looking for it. For a very young
child, out of sight is literally out of mind. When the baby is older and has acquired object
permanence, she will start to look for things that are hidden because she will know that things
can exist even when they can’t be seen.
Example: Suppose a researcher gives a three-year-old girl two full bottles of juice. The girl will
agree that they both contain the same amount of juice. But if the researcher pours the contents
of one bottle into a short, fat tumbler, the girl will then say that the bottle has more. She doesn’t
realize that the same volume of juice is conserved in the tumbler.
Piaget argued that children are not capable of conservation during the preoperational stage
because of three weaknesses in the way they think. He called these
weaknesses centration, irreversibility, and egocentrism:
Centration is the tendency to focus on one aspect of a problem and ignore other key
aspects. In the example above, the three-year-old looks only at the higher juice level in
the bottle and ignores the fact that the bottle is narrower than the tumbler. Because of
centration, children in the preoperational stage cannot carry out hierarchical
classification, which means they can’t classify things according to more than one level.
Irreversibility is the inability to mentally reverse an operation. In the example, the three-
year-old can’t imagine pouring the juice from the tumbler back into the bottle. If she
poured the juice back, she’d understand that the tumbler holds the same amount of liquid
as the bottle.
Egocentrism is the inability to take someone else’s point of view. Animism, or the belief
that even inanimate objects are living, results from egocentrism. Children assume that
since they are alive, all other things must be too.
Talking Tables and Dancing Dishwashers
Animism explains the popularity of children’s movies featuring characters such as talking
vegetables or singing candlesticks. Young children can readily believe that objects around them
are alive, which means they can be entertained by stories involving living objects. Children and
adolescents past the age of seven generally lose interest in heroic toasters and prefer stories
about people.
Birth to 1
Stage 1: Use of Movements are primarily reflexive
month
reflexes
Stage 4:
Coordination of 8-12 Differentiates goals and goal-
secondary months directed activities.
schemata
Lawrence Kohlberg focused on moral reasoning, or why people think the way they do about
right and wrong. Influenced by Piaget, who believed that moral reasoning depends on the level
of cognitive development, Kohlberg proposed that people pass through three levels of moral
development. He divided each level into two stages.
Cordial interpersonal
LEVEL II: Conventional
relationships are maintained.
(13+ years)
orientation
Person believes that trust is basis for
relationships.
Goodness to Truth
Wants to help others while being
responsible to self.
Accepts concept of
reciprocal fairness.
Late
Assumes responsibility for
Stage 4:Individuative- adolescent &
own attitudes & beliefs.
reflective faith young adult