Process, content, and context of self-development in adolescence: four-year longitudinal study. Paper presented at XIth European Conference of Developmental Psychology.

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Title in English Process, content, and context of self-development in adolescence: four-year longitudinal study
Authors

MACEK Petr

Year of publication 2003
Type R&D Presentation
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Description The aims of this contribution are to examine self-development and identity formation throughout adolescence. Both these processes are seen as complicated but also highly important in regard to adolescent psychological functioning and social life. Sense of self can be described by using of many different constructs and terms, expressing different aspects of self-recognition and self-understanding, self-evaluation, self-regulation, and identity formation. However, it is also important to integrate these different aspects of subjective personal experience and to explore the self as unity. Several measures of different aspects of self and identity (on different levels of self-reflection) were included into four-year longitudinal study of Czech adolescents. This project was broadly oriented on peer, family, and school context of the adolescent psychosocial development. It allowed to explore personal and social context of self and identity development. The first part of this contribution informs about relationships between different aspects of self-system (self-esteem, self-efficacy, styles of self-definition, statuses of identity). The second part examines to specify the influence of parents, friends, and peers on self and identity development. Personality traits and gender are also discussed as important determinants self and identity development.
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