Skip to main content
Rocky View Schools - Moodle
  • Home
  • Calendar
  • Resource Courses
  • More
You are currently using guest access
Log in
Rocky View Schools - Moodle
Home Calendar Resource Courses
  1. Child_Development_and_Caregiving_12 copy 1
  2. Unit 3
  3. 3.6 Assignment: Erikson's Theory & You

3.6 Assignment: Erikson's Theory & You

Completion requirements
Receive a grade

Stage 5 of Erikson’s theory is “Identity vs. Role Confusion.” This is the stage you are in right now.

Your assignment is to answer this question after reading the selection below: To what extent does Erikson’s theory accurately represent what you see in the world today?  “To what extent” asks you “how much” (not at all, a bit, sort of, quite a bit, not at all). Explain.

Reading:

 The fifth stage of Erik Erikson's theory of psychosocial development is identity vs. role confusion, and it occurs during adolescence, from about 12-18 years. During this stage, adolescents search for a sense of self and personal identity, through an intense exploration of personal values, beliefs, and goals.

During adolescence, the transition from childhood to adulthood is most important. Children are becoming more independent, and begin to look at the future in terms of career, relationships, families, housing, etc. The individual wants to belong to a society and fit in.

The adolescent mind is essentially a mind or moratorium, a psychosocial stage between childhood and adulthood, and between the morality learned by the child, and the ethics to be developed by the adult (Erikson, 1963, p. 245)

This is a major stage of development where the child has to learn the roles he will occupy as an adult. It is during this stage that the adolescent will re-examine his identity and try to find out exactly who he or she is. Erikson suggests that two identities are involved: the sexual and the occupational.

According to Bee (1992), what should happen at the end of this stage is “a reintegrated sense of self, of what one wants to do or be, and of one’s appropriate sex role”. During this stage the body image of the adolescent changes.

Erikson claims that the adolescent may feel uncomfortable about their body for a while until they can adapt and “grow into” the changes. Success in this stage will lead to the virtue of fidelity.

Fidelity involves being able to commit one's self to others on the basis of accepting others, even when there may be ideological differences.

During this period, they explore possibilities and begin to form their own identity based upon the outcome of their explorations. Failure to establish a sense of identity within society ("I don’t know what I want to be when I grow up") can lead to role confusion. Role confusion involves the individual not being sure about themselves or their place in society.

In response to role confusion or identity crisis, an adolescent may begin to experiment with different lifestyles (e.g., work, education or political activities).

Also pressuring someone into an identity can result in rebellion in the form of establishing a negative identity, and in addition to this feeling of unhappiness.

Reading URL: https://www.simplypsychology.org/Erik-Erikson.html

 

Back to 'Unit 3'
◄ 3.6 Ages 15-18 Years
3.7 Developmental Trauma ►
Contact site support
You are currently using guest access (Log in)
Get the mobile app
Powered by Moodle