For Emerging Adulthood

For Emerging Adulthood



Emerging adulthood is a phase of the life span between adolescence and also full-fledged adulthood which encompasses late adolescence and early adulthood, proposed by Jeffrey Arnett in a 2000 article in the American Psychologist. It primarily describes people living in developed countries, but it is also experienced by young people in urban wealthy families in the Global South.

Emerging Adulthood: Defining the Developmental Stage, Emerging Adulthood: Defining the Developmental Stage, 9/19/2018  · Emerging adulthood is a developmental stage proposed by psychologist Jeffrey Jensen Arnett. The stage takes place between ages 18-25, after adolescence and before young adulthood. It is marked by a period of identity exploration. Scholars disagree about whether or not emerging adulthood is a true developmental stage.

Emerging adulthood (EA) is defined as a distinct time period between the ages of 18 and 25 where individuals transition from adolescence to young adulthood. During EA, individuals have the freedom to explore values and beliefs in their lives distinct from previously identified authority figures in childhood and are not confined to the limitations associated with adulthood.

The theory of emerging adulthood proposes that a new life stage has arisen between adolescence and young adulthood over the past half-century in industrialized countries. Fifty years ago, most young people in these countries had entered stable adult roles in love and work by their late teens or early twenties.

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