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Brooks Lawrence, Deborah – ProQuest LLC, 2019
As life expectancy rates continue to rise, so does the need for continued participation in the workforce. Economic sustainability and aging in place become values anticipated and realized through longer life spans. The ability to maintain lifestyle is severely halted when individuals are faced with loss of employment. This qualitative case study…
Descriptors: Unemployment, Aging (Individuals), Employment, Dislocated Workers
Malone, Johanna C.; Liu, Sabrina R.; Vaillant, George E.; Rentz, Dorene M.; Waldinger, Robert J. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Erikson's (1950) model of adult psychosocial development outlines the significance of successful involvement within one's relationships, work, and community for healthy aging. He theorized that the consequences of not meeting developmental challenges included stagnation and emotional despair. Drawing on this model, the present study uses…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Midlife Transitions, Older Adults
Varmecky, Jane Hyde – Journal of Adult Education, 2012
Many adults return to formal learning situations to pursue lifelong learning goals because their lives are in transition from dealing with real-life problems such as divorce and re-marriage. The purpose of this study was to describe what couples learned that contributed to the success of their subsequent marriages and how they learned it. The…
Descriptors: Experience, Aging (Individuals), Midlife Transitions, Divorce
Sternberg, Robert J.; Kaufman, James C. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2012
The propulsion theory of creative contributions is a theory that focuses on how a creative act or product builds on and adds to knowledge in various fields. In this article, we apply the propulsion theory of creative contributions not to creative discoveries or inventions, but rather to late-career decisions about future directions in which one…
Descriptors: Creativity, Career Development, Theories, Decision Making
Shultz, Kenneth S.; Wang, Mo – American Psychologist, 2011
The concept and the process of retirement are rapidly evolving. As a result, psychologists are in a unique position to understand and explain the dynamics behind the changing face of retirement. We begin this article with a brief overview of the history of retirement and then note the various definitions used when studying retirement. We then…
Descriptors: Retirement, Attitudes, Context Effect, Aging (Individuals)
Foster, Thomas W.; Kreider, Val; Waugh, Jennifer – Gerontology & Geriatrics Education, 2009
Recent trends in counselor education are moving away from a standardized academic track in gerocounseling. In response to this, we surveyed 385 counseling students regarding issues related to gerocounseling, such as their interest in gerocounseling topics, willingness to participate in gerocounseling training, how prepared they feel to work with…
Descriptors: Gerontology, Counseling, Counselor Training, Adult Development
Schafer, Markus H.; Shippee, Tetyana Pylypiv – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
The passage of time is fundamentally experienced through people's interaction with their social worlds. Life-course scholars acknowledge the multiple aspects of time-based experience but have given little attention to age identity in a dynamic context. Drawing from a stress-process model, we expected that turbulence within people's family…
Descriptors: Family Role, Stress Variables, Self Concept, Older Adults
Evans, Patricia – Qualitative Report, 2008
The study was conducted in response to the need for an increased understanding of the aging experiences of women transitioning midlife. The purpose of the research was to explore the personal understanding of the changes that occur during the midlife period. A qualitative case study was implemented to ascertain how women of the Latter-day Saint…
Descriptors: Females, Midlife Transitions, Qualitative Research, Aging (Individuals)

Connelly, Martin F.; Avis, Joan P. – Career Planning and Adult Development Journal, 2001
As the population ages and more older workers remain in the work force, counselors can assist clients and their families by using the Active Living Model, which involves transitions education, life planning, and renewal strategies. (SK)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Career Counseling, Family Counseling, Midlife Transitions

Glass, J. Conrad; Grant, Katherine A. – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1983
Examines some of the major transitions of aging and factors that determine the individual's ability to adjust to these changes. Discusses difficulties in providing services for this group, such as developing a classification system, and indicates ways counseling services can help older persons cope with role transitions and losses. (LLL)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Aging (Individuals), Coping, Counseling
LaRocco, Diana J.; Bruns, Deborah A. – Education, 2006
A paucity of literature focuses on the experiences of early career faculty (pre-tenure) who are practiced education professionals and who choose higher education as a second career. This exploratory, qualitative study examined the perceptions of former education professionals' integration into academic responsibilities, connections to and…
Descriptors: Family Life, College Faculty, Aging (Individuals), Midlife Transitions
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Select Committee on Aging. – 1983
This document contains prepared statements and witness testimony from the Congressional hearing on the economics of aging and preretirement planning. Prepared statements are given by Representatives Skelton and Daub. Topics which are discussed include the population affected, needs of the elderly, and government role. Witness testimony is given by…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Economic Factors, Hearings, Individual Needs
Wyatt-Brown, A. M. – 1988
Gerontologists have studied the role of memory and reminiscence in later life to see if life review leads to increased satisfaction in old age. Novelists offer some concrete examples of the varying ways that this review can affect the self-esteem of aging persons. Molly Keane, Elizabeth Bowen, and Peter Taylor all agree that late middle age…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Authors, Creative Writing, Literary Criticism
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

Schaie, K. Warner – Gerontologist, 1989
Uses findings from Seattle Longitudinal Study of adult cognitive development to assist discussion of event history analysis. Illustrates its application to data involving changes of states in individual behavior related to human aging. Describes hazard functions which permit assessment of future decline risk and prediction as to when individual…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Behavior Change, Behavior Development, Cognitive Ability