Adolescents' Preparation for the Future: Perils and Promise: A Report of the Study Group on Adolescence in the 21st Century

Portada
Reed W. Larson, B. Bradford Brown, Jeylan T. Mortimer
Wiley, 2003 M04 2 - 176 páginas
Societies around the world are changing rapidly, but are adolescents being prepared to be adults in the emerging global world? An international study group addresses this question. Articles examine how well adolescents are being prepared for productive employment, healthy relationships, civic participation, and positive physical and mental health.

Acerca del autor (2003)

Reed W. Larson is a professor in the Departments of Human and Community Development, Psychology, and Educational Psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research focuses on the daily experience of adolescents and their parents. He is author of Divergent Realities: The Emotional Lives of Mothers, Fathers, and Adolescents (with Maryse Richards), which examines the organization of time and emotions within the daily lives of families and how emotions are transmitted between family members. He is also the author of Being Adolescent: Conflict and Growth in the Teenage Years (with Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi), which deals with the daily experience of high school students. He has also conducted research on adolescents media use, time alone, experience with friends, and school experience. He recently completed a study of middle class adolescents in India. His current area of interest is adolescents' experience in extra-curricular, community activities, and others structured, voluntary activities in the after-school hours. He holds a B.A. degree in psychology from the University of Minnesota and a Ph.D. in Human Development from the University of Chicago.

B. Bradford Brown is Professor of Human Development and former Chair of the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He received an A.B. in sociology from Princeton University and Ph.D. in human development from the University of Chicago before joining the faculty of the University of Wisconsin in 1979. Dr. Brown's research has focused on adolescent peer relations. He is especially well known for his work on teenage peer groups and peer pressure and their influence on school achievement and social adjustment. He is the co-editor (with Wyndol Furman and Candice Feiring) of The Development of Romantic Relationships in Adolescence. With colleagues Laurence Steinberg and Sanford Dornbusch he also wrote Beyond the Classroom: Why School Reform has Failed and What Parents Need to Do. Dr. Brown has served as a consultant for numerous groups, including the Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development, the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, and the Blue Ribbons Schools program of the U.S. Department of Education. He is currently the Editor of the Journal of Research on Adolescence. He and his wife, also a faculty member at U.W.-Madison, enjoy the challenges of raising three sons.

Jeylan T. Mortimer is professor of sociology at the University of Minnesota and director of the Life Course Center. She has conducted a series of longitudinal research projects related to the social psychology of work, including studies of occupational choice, vocational development in the family and work settings, psychological change in response to work, job satisfaction, work involvement, and the link between work and family life. Since 1987 she has directed the Youth Development Study, an ongoing longitudinal examination of the effects of early work experience on students and its implications for mental health, adjustment, and achievement as they mature. The interrelations of adolescent work and family life are examined in her book, Adolescents, Work, and Family: An Intergenerational Development Analysis (with M. Finch). She is now studying the effects of adolescent work on the timing and patterning of markers of transition to adulthood. She is past chair of the Social Psychology Section and the Sociology of Children Section of the American Sociological Association and Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She holds a B.A. degree from Tufts University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan.

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