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A Professional Development Resource for K12 Teachers and Leaders.
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ICLcenter can help you learn about educational standards and become prepared to meet the standards-based education of your students.
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BACK
DEVELOPMENTAL
PROFILE
FOR 10TH-12TH GRADE
STUDENTS
AGES 15-18
Physical Development
- Physiological
(body) development is generally complete.
- Nearly
all students have acquired secondary sexual characteristics (body hair, breasts,
etc.).
- Height
in males may continue to develop, but body definition is generally set.
- Acceptance
of the body and external body appearance is occurring, and new emphasis on
dress and enhancing appearance is typical.
- Emphasis
on sexuality and appreciation by the opposite sex are common and signal an
acceptance of recent growth and change.
- Primping
and discussion of trends that are "in" is age appropriate.
- Anxiety
about the body or inability to accept body changes may result in obsessive
attention to diet, weight building, or exercise.
Emotional Development
- The dramatic
effort to find the “lost” self becomes more rational and less intense.
- There is an
emerging sense of self-identity (who and what the person is becoming).
- The need to
be one type of person in order to please peers lessons and a sense of self-integrity
(comfortableness with true self) begins to formulate.
- A "second
person perspective" may truly emerge helping the person to recognize
other needs outside of the self.
- Self-reliance
becomes important.
- There is a
deepening need to reach out, give of the self and meet the needs of less fortunate
others.
- Those who
have been overindulged may have a new sense of hardship due to an inability
to get outside of self and put another first.
- The adolescent
is more able to take "no" for an answer without feeling a sense
of personal loss or anger.
Philosophical/Moral
Development
- The student
may begin to see himself or herself beyond adolescence as a member of the
community or society. If so, then moral reasoning will focus on protecting
the society and following community guidelines.
- The later
adolescent stage of being part child and part adult is evidenced by two paths.
The less mature stance is, "I've got to be me." The more mature
stance is, "For the good of all." The latter stance indicates a
readiness to join the adult community.
- Classical
literature may help with consolidation of personal growth and curtail a sense
of loneliness or isolation.
- Laws may take
on a new meaning as a source of security and honor.
- There may
be recognition of the need to establish a belief system for the self that
is not a reflection of childhood or of peers. There is a growing sense of
importance for meeting the needs of a best and good society.
Social Development
- The need for
peer approval uses much of the student's energy.
- Students who
are holding to group membership as personal identification may be less dependent
or take leadership roles in the group or "gang".
- The self is
more defined as a self and less dependent on external acceptance.
- Family conflict
may lessen due to a growing developmental stability in the child, but conflict
will resume if a basic appreciation for each member as a person in not achieved
or practiced.
- Some youngsters
are now looking to intimacy for definition and gratification of sexual drives.
- World of work
becomes very real for those who do not plan for college.
- Integration
of social concerns into self-identify may lead to "citizen of the world"
perception for some.
Intellectual/Cognitive
Development
- Formal operations
are in effect in both mathematical and verbal domains (mental operations can
be performed without concrete objects and abstract thinking begins).
- Reasoning
ability and logic give a sense of pleasure.
- Thoughts and
ideas appear to be ways to solve problems and facilitate change.
- A feeling
of idealism/optimism often blooms. The student often wishes to "change
the world" based on ideas and the sheer will to make a difference and
solve problems.
- Systematic
and sequential reasoning become easy and fulfilling.
- Synthesis
(the ability to make sense of a great deal of information) becomes easier
and rewarding.
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©2008 The Institute for Innovative Community Learning at
the University of West Florida College of Professional Studies. All rights reserved.
For more information, call 850-595-0001 or email icl@uwf.edu
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