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1. DEVELOPMENTAL Frames of Reference THEORISTS: Jung, Freud, Erikson, Levinson, Kohlberg and Wilcox and Gilligan, Piaget, Laslett and Mosey.
3. BASIC ASSUMPTIONS Development is considered an age and stage process which is sequential.
Influences of culture, socialization and morality play an integral part.
Each theorist defines stages differently
4. Basic Assumptions, cont. Moseys Adaptive Skills model is useful for interpreting these theories in the context of occupational behavior (Cole, Appendix C)
Sensory Integration Skill
Cognitive Skill
Dyadic Interaction Skill
Group Interaction Skill
Self-Identity Skill
Sexual (Role)-Identity Skill.
5. ANNE MOSEY: RECAPITULATION OF ONTOGENESIS A Developmental Frame of Reference
Ontogenesis = normal development of an organism
Adaptive Skills learned patterns of behavior (essential) for successful participation in ...occupational performance.
6. SIX ADAPTIVE SKILLS& Subskills 1. Sensory Integration Skill: ability to receive, select, combine, and coordinate vestibular, proprioceptive, and tactile information for functional use.
Based on Ayres
Ages Birth to 3
7. Mosey, Cont. 2. Cognitive Skill: ability to perceive, represent, and organize sensory information for the purpose of thinking and problem-solving
Based on Piaget
Ages: Birth to 13 years
8. Mosey, cont. 3. Dyadic Interaction Skill: ability to participate in a variety of dyadic relationships
Association relationships (3-5 yrs.)
Authority relationships (6-7 yrs.)
Chum relationships (10-14 yrs.)
Peer-Authority relationships (15-17 yrs.)
See authority figures realistically
Intimate relationships (18-25 yrs.)
Nurturing relationships (19-30 yrs.)
9. Mosey, cont. 4. Group Interaction Skill: The ability to engage in a variety of primary groups (Appendix B)
Parallel group (18 mo.-2 yrs.)
Project group (2-4 yrs.)
Egocentric-cooperative group
(5-7 yrs.)
Cooperative group (9-12 yrs.)
Mature group (15-18 yrs.)
10. Mosey, cont. 5. Self-identity Skill: ability to perceive the self as a relatively autonomous, holistic, and acceptable person who has permanence and continuity over time (influenced by Erikson)
Self as worthy person (9-12 months)
Assets & limitations (11-15 yrs.)
Self directed (20-25 yrs.)
Productive member of social group (30-35 yrs.)
Autonomous identity (35-50 yrs.)
Aging of oneself, understand mortality (45-60 yrs.)
11. Mosey, cont. Sexual Identity Skill: ability to perceive ones sexual nature as good and to participate in a relatively long-term sexual relationship that is oriented to the mutual satisfaction of sexual needs
Parallels psychosexual stages
Based on ego psychology
12. Moseys Adaptive Skills, cont. Represents attempt to integrate many developmental theories as they relate to occupation and adaptation in daily life (OT)
Provides guidelines for evaluating, structuring, and sequencing skills in a variety of areas.
13. Mosey, Current Research Mary Donohues Group Profile
Means for validating Moseys group interaction skill sequence
1. Parallel Level Group:
Three year olds playing separately next to each other in a sand box
Adults standing in rows next to each other doing movement to music in a Movement Group
14. Donohue, Group Profile, cont. 2. Project/Associative Level Group
Four year olds playing telephone for two minutes
Five year olds building blocks together to make a fort 5 minute interaction
Adults engaged in a Pass the ball game identifying names of members 15 minute interactive exercise
15. Donohues Group Profile, cont. 3. Egocentric Cooperative Level Group (Basic Coop.)
Seven year olds role playing in costumes with mutually designed guidelines for role interaction
Adults in an ADL group washing, cutting, mixing, serving, and eating fruit in a salad
16. Donohues Group Profile, cont. 4. Cooperative Level Group (supportive cooperative)
Sixteen year olds discussing feelings about musical lyrics while making decorations for a parade float
Seniors discussing feelings about peers illnesses, memories of the past, and process of dying
17. Donohues Group Profile, cont. 5. Mature Level Group
Twenty year old college students take turns coaching each other in a computer science course
Forty year old parents of children with learning disabilities coach each other on methods of intervention for their children in a parents support group
18. FUNCTION Achieving the appropriate developmental tasks for the current age/stage of the individual.
Each theorist defines normal function at each stage somewhat differently.
19. FunctionDysfunction, cont. Dysfunction occurs when the clients growth & development fall below that expected for his/her age.
Illness may cause regression to an earlier developmental stage.
20. CHANGE An individuals need for mastery motivates skill learning.
What an individual seeks to master at a given age is determined by an internal biological clock.
21. ASSESSMENT Tests of adaptive skills for each sequential stage of development
Evaluation of age-specific skills in comparison with normal development is most helpful, when using specific theories of development.
22. OT Intervention The occupational therapist arranges a growth-facilitating environment for the stimulation of age-appropriate behavior and skill learning.
Mastery of skills and success experiences are important treatment concepts.
Focus of activities depends on specific theorist.
23. The End Next time: Levinson, review of other theorists, Developmental case assignment
24. Review of Developmental Theories Freud: Psychosexual stages
Jung: Spiritual development
Erikson: Psychosocial Development
Kohlberg & Wilcox: Moral reasoning
Piaget: Intellectual Development
Levinson: Life Transitions
Laslett: Third Age Theory
25. Carl Jung: Spiritual development Childhood: birth to puberty
Blissful ignorance, inherited predispositions
Youth: puberty to 35 yrs.
Conscience and doubting
Taking on responsibility
Midlife: 35 yrs. to old age
afternoon of life
Change in direction, individuation & integration
Old Age: infirmity & death
Afterlife & collective unconscious
26. Erikson:8 Psychosocial stages Trust vs. Mistrust (0-2 yrs.)
Autonomy vs. Shame & doubt (2-4 yrs.)
Initiative vs. Guilt (5-7 yrs.)
Industry vs. Inferiority (8-12 yrs.)
Identity vs. Role confusion (13-22 yrs.)
Intimacy vs. Isolation (23-35 yrs.)
Generativity vs. Stagnation (36-50 yrs.)
Integrity vs. Despair (50 yrs.-death)
27. Kohlberg & Wilcox: Moral Pre-conventional: 2-4 yrs.
Stage 1: egocentric, no empathy
Stage 2: reciprocity, make deals
Conventional: 6+ yrs.
Decisions based on pleasing others
Stage 3: authority is fair, good people get best treatment
Stage 4: Law & order orientation
Rules necessary to maintain social structure
Only one system is right
28. Kohlberg & Wilcox, cont. Post-conventional: 11-12 yrs.
Fairness is free-standing logic
Stage 5: Individual rights & human dignity can override rules
Empathy influences decisions
Right & wrong separate from rules
Stage 6: Ideal stage, rarely encountered in reality
Unconditional value of rights of humanity
Empathized with all participants in moral dilemma
Creatively resolves polarities and contradictions
29. Carol Gilligan, A Different Voice (Female vs. Male) Points out that prior theorists based their stages on male development
Challenges the age & stage nature of adult development
Professor at Harvard
Studied women from childhood through maturity
Considers factors of culture, time, occasion, and gender
Views main difference as
Men focus on career, autonomy
Women focus on relationships
30. Daniel Levinsons Lifes Adult Transitions Study done at Yale University
Interviewed men at midlife (35-45 yrs.)
Gail Sheehys Passages
Identified 3 major crises of adulthood, early, middle, and late life transitions
During transitions, developmental tasks and conflict resolution must occur
31. Developmental tasks Primarily the tasks of each transition period are to:
Re-evaluate the existing life structure,
Explore the possibilities of change and
Make choices that will restructure life in the next era.
32. Levinson, cont. Era's are in between stages of stability described as young, middle and late adulthood.
Life structure includes:
Place of residence
Career or job
Family & social groups
Roles & routines
Interests & leisure pursuits
33. Levinson, Young Adult Transition (17-22 yrs.)
Separation from home of origin
Establishing separate identity
Establishing independence
Physical
Financial
Emotional
Tasks: A young adult must
Form a dream
Find a mate and start a family
Choose and prepare for a career
Enter into a mentor relationship
34. Levinson, Midlife Transition (40-45 yrs.) A person at midlife must reappraise the past and resolve four polarities:
Young/old
Destruction/creation
Masculine/Feminine
Attachment/Separateness
According to Levinson, each polarity or conflict is resolved by exploring the opposite side from that which predominated prior to midlife.
35. Levinson, Late Life Transition (Ages 60-65 yrs.)
A person approaching late life must come to terms with certain realities:
Physical decline
Loss of the productive role
Coming to terms with death
36. Peter Laslett: Third Age Theory Describes 4 Ages in lifespan development
Based on current population studies:
People living longer 85+ yrs.
People maintaining health longer
Published in 1991 in England A Fresh Map of Life
Not well known in USA
37. Laslett, cont. 1. First Age: dependency, socialization, education
2. Second Age: maturity, independence, familial & social responsibility
3. Third Age: self fulfillment, Crown of Life comes after release from pressures of workaday world.
4. Fourth Age: dependence, physical decline, preparation for death
38. Lasletts Third Age Begins at retirement (no specific age range)
Ends when person becomes dependent on others for important life tasks
Takes into account the possibility of 25-30 years of wellness & self fulfillment
Seeks to change societys view of older adulthood from () to (+).
39. Lasletts Fourth Age Johnson & Barer (1992) found that 50% of those over 85 years could be considered disengaged.
Signs of disengagement were:
1) A redefinition of social boundaries,
2) A change in time orientation, and
3) A decrease in emotional intensity.
A voluntary narrowing of ones social circle has been recognized as Socio emotional Selectivity Theory (SST) (Carstensen,1992).
40. Selection, Optimization & Compensation (Baltes, 2002) Three components of adaptation
Selective optimization focus efforts on tasks of immediate priority explains maintenance of high goal involvement into later adulthood.
Compensation investing goal-relevant means to counteract losses
Takes gains & losses jointly into account
Based on Berlin Aging Study
Life management strategies apply to all ages good research evidence
41. Disengagement Theory Originally introduced by Cumming and Henry (1961)
Involves an older adults inevitable mutual withdrawal from major life roles and responsibilities.
Results in decreasing interaction between the aging person and others in the social systems to which he or she belongs.
Criticized for alignment with medical model which equates aging with physical decline.
More consistent with Lasletts Fourth Age.
42. Continuity Theory (Atchley, 1989) Suggests that as adults age, they make adaptive choices which tend to preserve existing internal and external structures and
Strive to maintain their self identity and existing perceptions of self and the world.
One occupational therapy application of continuity theory is Velde and Fidlers Lifestyle Performance Model (2002).
43. Activity Theory of Aging Activity theory (Havighurst, 1961) has contradicted disengagement theory almost from on the beginning.
Proposes that greater continued engagement in activities leads to greater life satisfaction in the later years.
Occupational therapists have embraced this theory, as have most senior social programs over the last half-century.
Current research shows this to be true of younger retirees
More consistent with Lasletts Third Age.
44. OT Interventions Based on Developmental Theories Activities from this model include: future goal setting, evaluation of the past, reminiscence, values exploration, and self awareness activities.
Group treatment is useful when helping people with life tasks during transitions
45. The End Developmental Case Assignment
Compare two theories of older adulthood
Levinsons Late Life Transition
Lasletts Third Age
Interview an older adult (60+ yrs.)