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Hardin, Paula Payne – 1990
Although aging is a process that affects everyone, individuals can choose how they will behave as they become older. Some persons choose to focus on the negative, becoming more and more self-centered and driving away those around them, becoming a burden to themselves and to society. Others, often prompted by a midlife crisis or period of…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Attitudes, Developmental Stages
Maddy, Jane Ellen – 1985
For the healthy midlife adult, the second half of life provides a balance for the first half: men become more nurturant while women become more aggressive. The definition of the midlife woman is tied to the family cycle, when her children leave home. Marital satisfaction often increases after the children are gone and relinquishing her role as…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Family Relationship, Females, Middle Aged Adults
Hamill, Sharon Boland – 1988
This study examined the interrelationships between individual development and the family system by testing the hypothesis that variations in family relations during middle adolescence are associated with psychological and social aspects of adolescent development and with parental midlife development. Data were collected from 27 parent-adolescent…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Adult Development, Family Life
Cardinell, C. F. – 1981
Burnout must be considered as symptomatic of a serious event in a person's life--a mid-life crisis, as it is widely termed. Numerous writings point out that during a period of life, roughly between the ages of 30 and 55, many people reach a crisis brought on by the realization that everyone's career, status, and life are measurable and limited.…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Developmental Stages, Elementary Secondary Education, Job Satisfaction
Bobo, Terry Skinner – 1987
Midlife divorce for women can be a time for creative growth or divorce can lead to loneliness, bitterness, and depression. Middle-aged women appear to experience an inordinate amount of stress from divorce because of loss of roles and lack of new role models. Based upon role theory and divorce as a normal developmental process, a feminist…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Coping, Divorce, Emotional Adjustment
Hardin, Paula – 1986
The study described in this paper was conducted to delineate the phenomenon of generativity in middle-aged adults in an attempt to identify its major characteristics, attributes, determinants, and situational or circumstantial variables. Three themes emerged from a literature survey of materials on middle adulthood: the theme of the entry…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adult Education, Educational Needs, Middle Aged Adults
Bar-Yam, Aureet – 1989
A validation study of 30 married females and 30 married males was conducted on a theoretical model of stages in interpersonal development developed by Bar-Yam Hassan (Bar-Yam Hassan & Bar-Yam, 1987). According to the model, the five stages of adult interpersonal development are: (1) Social Relatedness versus Self-Insistence, or need for Approval;…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages, Emotional Adjustment
Neufeldt, David E.; And Others – 1985
Some researchers have suggested that there are developmental stages in adult life. If adult developmental stages exist, such stages would be reflected in one's career. Individuals would progress from their career dream when they first enter the work force through a period of stability, a mid-life transition period when they compare reality to…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Adult Development, Affiliation Need, Career Development
Lingren, Herbert G. – 1979
The recent literature concerning mid-life transitions of men and the impact upon their personal and interpersonal lives is reviewed. Areas of concern addressed by these materials include adult development, issues and tasks of mid-life, and life phases. A framework for evaluation and therapeutic intervention is provided for counselors and helping…
Descriptors: Adult Counseling, Adult Development, Career Change, Counselor Role
Narushima, Miya – 1999
The theory of perspective transformation was used as a framework for a study of volunteerism among older adults, examining whether volunteering in community organizations in late adulthood brings about transformation in meaning structures in later life development, and if and how it affects aging at both the individual and societal levels. Two…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Case Studies, Foreign Countries
Caffarella, Rosemary S. – 1988
Integrating one's career as an adult educator with the other parts of one's life is not an easy task for many adult educators. One reason for the difficulty is that there are many facets to this integration process: time, emotionality, conflict, complexity, change, and situational factors. Individuals need to decide what faces or roles are…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adult Development, Adult Education, Adult Educators
Boylan, Richard J.; Hawkes, Glenn R. – 1986
Past research has examined middle adulthood as a developmental process with outcomes predictive of development into old age. A study was undertaken to explore adult psychological and career development from an ecological perspective taking into account factors that influence and modify self-perception, values, identity, and social interaction. A…
Descriptors: Administrators, Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Attitude Change
Barnett, Rosalind C.; Baruch, Grace K. – 1981
Conceptualization of the lives of adult women and the forces affecting their well-being have concentrated on five constructs: (1) chronological age; (2) menopause and the empty nest; (3) marital status; (4) parity; and (5) multiple role involvement as a source of stress. A re-examination of these variables focused on the concerns and…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adults, Aging (Individuals), Chronological Age
Ackerman, Rosalie J. – 1980
Use of the term "crisis" to define the midlife era suggests a limited sense of choice and control. The term "transition," however, emphasizes a process of change and suggests that the individual has both choice and power to grow and develop. An open-ended questionnaire was sent to professionals (N=42) in medical, psychological, sociological, and…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adults, Aging (Individuals), Career Change
Stringer-Moore, Donna M. – 1981
Midlife crises require different behavioral responses for women who have made decisions about marriage, motherhood, and career. For women experiencing midlife crises, assertiveness training has the potential to resolve conflicts. Assertiveness training (AT) consists of three components, i.e., skills training, anxiety reduction, and cognitive…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Anxiety, Assertiveness, Cognitive Development
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