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Adolescence is an important developmental period that poses significant challenges for both teens and parents. Although adolescents may become significant sources of irritation and frustration to parents, it is clear now that notions of adolescence as a time of storm and stress are overstated. In this book, Smetana proposes that adolescents' conflicts and disagreements with parents and their attempts to keep secrets and manage personal information are all reflections of adolescents' developing autonomy. Using examples from extensive interviews with adolescents and parents, Smetana illustrates…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Adolescence is an important developmental period that poses significant challenges for both teens and parents. Although adolescents may become significant sources of irritation and frustration to parents, it is clear now that notions of adolescence as a time of storm and stress are overstated. In this book, Smetana proposes that adolescents' conflicts and disagreements with parents and their attempts to keep secrets and manage personal information are all reflections of adolescents' developing autonomy. Using examples from extensive interviews with adolescents and parents, Smetana illustrates how adolescents and parents in different contexts actively negotiate autonomy and coordinate concerns with autonomy and personal choice with their developing understanding of society and social conventions, safety and health, and moral concerns with justice, welfare, and rights. Smetana draws on social domain theory to consider adolescent-parent relationships, parenting beliefs, and parenting practices among families of different cultures and ethnicities. Drawing on the author's 25 years of research, as well as popular sources and scholarly research drawn from anthropology, history, sociology, and psychology, this book provides an in-depth examination of adolescent social development in the context of the family.
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Autorenporträt
Judith G. Smetana is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Ph.D. Program in Developmental Psychology at the University of Rochester, where she also held the Frederika Warner Chair in Human Development from 1995 to 1998. She has served on the editorial boards of numerous journals, and she is the author of more than 150 articles and chapters on the development of children's moral and social reasoning and on adolescent-parent relationships in different ethnic and cultural contexts.
Rezensionen
"Overall, this book gives great detail on adolescentparent relationships and how they effect the development ofchildren . . . This is a comforting message, one very differentfrom popular accounts, and one that parents and adolescents wouldbenefit from appreciating" (Journal of Youth &Adolescence, 5 December 2012)"Few scholars have influenced the contemporary study ofadolescent-parent relationships as much as Judith Smetana. Ihighly recommend this book to anyone interested in the ways inwhich family relationships are transformed during this stage oflife."
--Laurence Steinberg, Temple University

"In this very thoughtful book Judith Smetana provides deepand insightful understandings of adolescence. Smetana masterfullypositions adolescence in explanations of difficulties anddevelopmental progress during these years. This splendid book isindispensable for anyone interested in adolescence, social andfamily relationships, moral theory, culture, anddevelopment."
--Elliot Turiel, University of California Berkeley