Applications

  1. Question 14.1

    Visit a fifth-, sixth-, or seventh-grade class. Note variations in the size and maturity of the students. Do you see any patterns related to gender, ethnicity, body fat, or self-confidence?

  2. Question 14.2

    Interview two to four of your friends who are in their late teens or early 20s about their memories of menarche or spermarche, including their memories of others’ reactions. Do their comments indicate that these events are, or are not, emotionally troubling for young people?

  3. Question 14.3

    Talk with someone who became a teenage parent. Were there any problems with the pregnancy, the birth, or the first years of parenthood? Would the person recommend teen parenthood? What would have been different had the baby been born three years earlier or three years later?

  4. Question 14.4

    Find two or three adults who, as adolescents, acted impulsively and did something that could have potentially caused great harm to themselves and/or other people. What do they recall about their thinking at the time of the incident? How would their actions differ now? What do their answers reveal about the adolescent mind?

ONLINE CONNECTIONS

WORTH PUBLISHERS

To accompany your textbook, you have access to a number of online resources, including Learning Curve, an adaptive quizzing program, critical thinking questions, and case studies. For access to any of these links, go to www.worthpublishers.com/launchpad/bergerls9e. In addition to these resources, you’ll also find links to video clips, personalized study advice, and an ebook. One of the videos and activities available online include:

  • Brain Development: Adolescence. There’s a lot going on in a teenager’s brain! Animations and illustrations highlight that development and its effect on behavior.
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