书评

IF 0.1 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, PSYCHOANALYSIS
J. McCombs
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The editors recognize adolescence as a critical and distinctive period in human development, fraught with unique and rewarding opportunities but also vulnerable to developmental risks. As adolescents actively navigate their development, they make sense of the world through coordinating activities that, in turn, shape their own individual development. As adolescents coordinate their activities, they develop a sense of self and fit themselves into the broader, social structure that surrounds them. Adolescents’ adaptive accommodation will depend on the coordination of their activities through opportunities for positive developmental outcomes and vulnerabilities inflicted when such coordinations are unsuccessful, impacting adolescents’ well-being, mental health, risk taking behaviors, parental conflict, and academic achievement. Amsel and Smetana divide a compilation of works authored by leading experts in developmental psychology into two parts. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《青少年的脆弱性和机会》是Jean Piaget专题讨论会系列的宝贵补充,通过发展心理学的视角探讨青春期。这本书重振了建构主义的人类发展观,强调学习是一个积极的过程,在这个过程中,个人适应新的信息,并将这些信息融入他们已经知道的东西中。编辑Eric Amsel和Judith G.Smetana重新唤醒了皮亚杰人理解青少年发展轨迹的原则。Jean Piaget将青少年视为学习和发展的积极推动者,在他们获得道德、理性和自主自我意识时,他们有权设计自己的发展。编辑们认识到,青春期是人类发展的关键和独特时期,充满了独特和有益的机会,但也容易受到发展风险的影响。当青少年积极引导自己的发展时,他们通过协调活动来理解世界,这些活动反过来又塑造了他们自己的个人发展。当青少年协调他们的活动时,他们会发展自我意识,并融入周围更广泛的社会结构。青少年的适应性适应将取决于他们的活动的协调,通过积极的发展成果的机会和这种协调不成功时造成的脆弱性,影响青少年的幸福感、心理健康、冒险行为、父母冲突和学业成绩。Amsel和Smetana将发展心理学领域的顶尖专家撰写的作品汇编分为两部分。第一个解决了青少年发展的生物学和认知组成部分,强调了青少年特有的神经系统变化,这些变化对青少年成年的进展是敏感但关键的。汇编的第二部分论述了心理社会和社会关系发展,强调了协调青少年与他人(即父母、同龄人、教师、重要他人以及青少年本人)之间的活动的影响。这种分裂的结构将生物学基础与环境力量分离开来,同时仍然承认在理解青少年发展过程中自然和后天之间的关键相互作用,这种相互作用在专注于青少年发展的前沿研究中得到了越来越多的检验(见,Negriff等人,2011;van Roekel等人,2011)。《青少年的脆弱性和机会》的第一章为读者提供了对本书内容的正式介绍,帮助读者浏览各章。它以建构主义视角的阐释开场,将青少年视为构建规范心理结构和过程的建筑师。编辑们通过皮亚杰关于基因认识论的原则找到了对建构主义观点的支持,即一个人所获得的知识的性质与其获得的过程内在地联系在一起。由于人类对世界有着直接的经验,他们不断地组织、协调和整合他们获得的新信息,并将其整合到他们已经知道的内容中,做出相应的调整。编辑们承认,近几十年来,“建筑主义者的婴儿被皮亚盖蒂的洗澡水抛弃了”(Amsel和Smetana,2011年,第6页)。他们发现,在对青春期错综复杂的动态和综合描述中,越来越需要复兴建构主义观点。然后,本章为本书的其余部分绘制了路线图,并向读者提供了E.Starosta(和)印第安纳大学Maurer法学院,美国印第安纳州布卢明顿,电子邮件:Estarost@indiana.edu
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Book Review
Adolescent Vulnerabilities and Opportunities, an invaluable addition to the Jean Piaget Symposium Series, explores adolescence through the lens of developmental psychology. The book reinvigorates the constructivist view of human development, emphasizing learning as an active process in which individuals accommodate new information and assimilate that information into what they already know. The editors, Eric Amsel and Judith G. Smetana, reawaken Piagetian principles in understanding the adolescent’s developmental trajectory. Jean Piaget embraced adolescents as active agents in their learning and development, empowered to design their development as they acquire morality, rationality, and an autonomous sense of self. The editors recognize adolescence as a critical and distinctive period in human development, fraught with unique and rewarding opportunities but also vulnerable to developmental risks. As adolescents actively navigate their development, they make sense of the world through coordinating activities that, in turn, shape their own individual development. As adolescents coordinate their activities, they develop a sense of self and fit themselves into the broader, social structure that surrounds them. Adolescents’ adaptive accommodation will depend on the coordination of their activities through opportunities for positive developmental outcomes and vulnerabilities inflicted when such coordinations are unsuccessful, impacting adolescents’ well-being, mental health, risk taking behaviors, parental conflict, and academic achievement. Amsel and Smetana divide a compilation of works authored by leading experts in developmental psychology into two parts. The first tackles the biological and cognitive components of adolescent development, emphasizing neurological changes unique to adolescence that are sensitive, yet critical, to the adolescent’s progression toward adulthood. The second part of the compilation addresses psychosocial and socio-relational development, underlining the impact of coordinating activities engaged in between the adolescent and others, namely parents, peers, teachers, and significant others, as well as the adolescent himself. The divided structure disentangles biological underpinnings from environmental forces, while still acknowledging the critical interplay between nature and nurture in understanding adolescent development, an interplay increasingly examined in cutting-edge research focusing on youth development (see, Negriff et al. 2011; van Roekel et al. 2011). The first chapter of Adolescent Vulnerabilities and Opportunities provides the reader with a formal introduction to the book’s content, assisting the reader in navigating through the chapters. It opens with an illustration of the constructivist perspective, viewing adolescents as architects constructing normative mental structures and processes. The editors find support for the constructivist perspective through Piagetian principles on genetic epistemology, namely that the nature of the knowledge one acquires is inherently linked to the process of its acquisition. As humans have direct experience with the world, they continually organize, coordinate, and integrate the new information they acquire into the repertoire of what they already know, making adjustments accordingly. The editors acknowledge that, in recent decades, the ‘‘constructivist baby has been thrown out with the Piagetian bathwater’’ (Amsel and Smetana 2011, p. 6). They find there is a growing need to revive the constructivist view in its dynamic and integrative account of the intricacies of adolescence. The chapter then proceeds to sketch out a road map for the rest of the book, providing the reader with E. Starosta (&) Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Bloomington, IN, USA e-mail: Estarost@indiana.edu
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