Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Introducing Peri-Adolescence, a new developmental phase

  • Hi, I'm Sarah Gillen. I'm a certified Parenting Coach, and a licensed Marriage & Family Therapist. I’m writing a book proposing a new phase of child development, that I strongly think needs to be recognized. The ideas in it benefit pre-teens and teens as well. These concepts also help marriages, and any other relationship! So, I’m hoping that many folks will find value and be helped to have happier relationships from the book.

    I want to discuss it here and get your responses. That’ll help me a lot to fine-tune the material for book form.
    I’ve coined the term, “peri-adolescence” to describe the new phase, which in girls is from 8 – 10, and in boys is 9 – 11.

    Have you been shocked or surprised by some of the behaviors of your kids in these age groups? Are you surprised by tantrums, rudeness, tough-guy posturing, increased aggression, sneering, or hyper-sensitivity and to tone or comments, leading to outrage and quickly escalating fights? Parents and teachers are seeing moodiness and upset that we used to expect in 13 year olds. What is going on, and why is it happening so much sooner?

    The angst that children are evincing looks like adolescence. In early adolescence – 13-14 or so, kids seem so tough and rejecting. They are moody, aloof. They don’t seem to want anything to do with us. In actuality, because of what is happening neurologically, as well as psychologically at this age, their aloofness and rudeness hide a vulnerable and delicate core. It’s as if they know that their sense of self is not ready for public exposure. On some level, they know that they don’t have a clear, strong sense of who they are with which to meet the rigors of adult life.

    So it is with 8-11 year olds now. The rudeness, the freaking out, are not signs children are more mature earlier. They are signs that the pressures have increased, the expectations that children feel have increased, and kids don’t know what to do with them, at the same time as their bodies are beginning the second largest change in their lives.

    The benefits of recognizing peri-adolescence as a developmental phase are that:
  • we can reduce painful mislabeling of their behavior and motivations, so that disruptive and conflictual acting out is reduced
  • ease their transition into adolescence
  • ensure that teens enjoy a healthy and rich connection with their families thru to adulthood
  • increase the possibility that girls, especially, will retain higher self-esteem (I’ll talk about the research that shows how much girls lose their self-confidence as they move from childhood into adolescence)

    Here, as well as In my own blog, http://www.peri-adolescence.typepad.com/, I’ll talk about:
  • the 3 reasons why children seem to be developing sooner,
  • what is going on biologically at this age, and
  • why it’s important to recognize the pressures on modern kids, both internal and external,
  • what parents and teachers can do to understand and respond differently,
  • what not to do.

    Is this topic of interest to you? What thoughts do you have as to what’s going on with our kids?




1 Comments:

At 12:24 PM, Blogger Dr.Bev said...

What a significant topic! I like the term "peri-adolescence" to describe those "tween" years.

It seems like this age group is so developmentally all over the map. Physically they are hitting puberty at a much earlier age. I know some girls who have started menstruation in 3rd grade - 8 years old!

Socially these kids are being exposed to so much so young through TV, school, community, and family with which they are not emotionally prepared to cope - drugs, language, sexuality, divorce, violence, etc. I will go to a PG13 movie (without my kids) and see 4 and 5 year old kids there with their parents. Pirates of the Carribean is PG13 and is being marketed to kids and so parents buckle and take their under 13 kids.

Thinking of Piaget and Kohlberg, these kids are still thinking in concrete, black and white terms, but faced with challenges that are very much gray.

Honestly, to think about this is sometimes overwhelming and makes me incredibly sad. Our children are the "canary in the coal mine" and they are asking us to take note.

Thanks for bringing up this important developmental phase.

Beverly Walsh
Life and Family Coach

 

Post a Comment

<< Home