Emerging Adults in America: Coming of Age in the 21st CenturyJeffrey Jensen Arnett, Jennifer Lynn Tanner Emerging Adults in America: Coming of Age in the 21st Century portrays the lives of young Americans between adolescence and young adulthood, a distinct developmental stage that editor Jeffrey Jensen Arnett describes as emerging adulthood. Over the past 40 years, the average age of marriage and parenthood has risen dramatically, and the years from the late teens through the mid-20s are no longer dedicated to settling into traditional adult roles. Instead, the focus has shifted to pursuing higher education, self-exploration, and shaping a future that best suits personal goals and desires. Along with coeditor Jennifer Lynn Tanner, Arnett has compiled a collection of chapters in this groundbreaking work that cover a range of topics from relationships with parents to views about love, sex, and marriage; from experiences in college to those in the work place; and from religious beliefs to beliefs about the concept of adulthood. This insightful book will be a valuable resource for developmental psychologists, therapists, and mental health practitioners who work with emerging adults and will appeal to young people and their families. |
From inside the book
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Page 13
... believe they are going to end up in a state of permanent marital bliss with their soul mate ( Popenoe & Whitehead , 2001 , 2002 ) . Before people settle into a long - term job , it is possible for them to believe they are going to find ...
... believe they are going to end up in a state of permanent marital bliss with their soul mate ( Popenoe & Whitehead , 2001 , 2002 ) . Before people settle into a long - term job , it is possible for them to believe they are going to find ...
Page 65
... believe the creationist teaching that God had created all life in a single instant , or did they believe the scientific account of gradual biological evolution ? Table 3.2 . King and Kitchner ( 1994 ) : EMERGING STRUCTURES OF ADULT ...
... believe the creationist teaching that God had created all life in a single instant , or did they believe the scientific account of gradual biological evolution ? Table 3.2 . King and Kitchner ( 1994 ) : EMERGING STRUCTURES OF ADULT ...
Page 247
... believe that others are more likely to be infected than themselves . For instance , about three quarters of emerging adults believe that their friends are more at risk for HIV infection than they are ( Lewis et al . , 1997 ) . Ku et al ...
... believe that others are more likely to be infected than themselves . For instance , about three quarters of emerging adults believe that their friends are more at risk for HIV infection than they are ( Lewis et al . , 1997 ) . Ku et al ...
Contents
Understanding the New Way | 3 |
A Critical | 21 |
Emerging Structures of Adult Thought | 59 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
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adaptation adolescents and emerging African American age period American Arnett associated binge drinking career chapter childhood cohort college students commitments competence complex condoms context continuity and discontinuity Côté cultural depression Developmental Psychology developmental tasks domains early effects ego development emerging adult development emerging adulthood emerging adults emotional Erikson ethnic identity European Americans experiences factors functioning high school Hispanic human development identity crisis identity development identity exploration identity formation identity issues identity status important increased individuals influence interaction ISRI Labouvie-Vief late teens Latino levels lives longitudinal studies maladaptive males marijuana marriage Masten mental health moratorium multiracial normative parent-child patterns peers perspective Phinney predictors psychopathology resilience risk romantic relationships sample Schulenberg sexual behavior Social Psychology society span span development stage structure suggests theory tion trajectories transition to adulthood University Press women York young adulthood young adults youth