: Richard A. Young, Sheila K. Marshall, Ladislav Valach, Jose Domene, Matthew D. Graham, Anat Zaidman-
: Transition to Adulthood Action, Projects, and Counseling
: Springer-Verlag
: 9781441962386
: 1
: CHF 85.50
:
: Sozialpädagogik, Soziale Arbeit
: English
: 233
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

The transition to adulthood involves, for most individuals, moving from school to work, establishment of long-term relationships, possibly parenting, and a number of other psychosocial transformations. Now more than ever, there is a concern within popular and research literature about children growing up too soon or too late or failing to realize changes associated with being adult. With this in mind, the book intends to answer a series of timely questions in regard to transition to adulthood and propose a wholly new approach to counseling that enables youth to engage fully in their lives and achieve their best.

Active Transition to Adulthood: A New Approach for Counseling will discuss the authors' work on the transition to adulthood (including early and late adolescence) from an entirely innovative perspective - action theory. Over a period of 10-15 years the authors have collected substantial data on adolescents and youth in transition, and will present an approach to counseling based on these data and cases.  The action theory perspective in which the authors have grounded their work addresses the intentional, goal-directed behavior of persons and groups that is expressed through particular actions, longer-term projects, and life-encompassing careers. In this book, both transition to adulthood and counseling will be covered in the language of goal-directed action. In this way both transition and counseling reflect and capture the action, projects, and careers in which families, youth, and clients are engaged and use to construct on-going identity and other narratives.



Richard A. Young, Ph.D., is Professor of Counselling Psychology at the University of British Columbia. He is a Fellow of the American and Canadian Psychological Associations, a Registered Psychologist in British Columbia, and President of Division 16 (Counselling Psychology) of the International Association of Applied Psychology. He is a founding member of the Aeschi Group on Meeting the Suicidal Person. His current interests include the application of action theory and the qualitative action-project method to a variety of research topics, including the transition to adulthood, families, career development, health, and suicide.

Sheila K. Marshall is an Associate Professor of Family Studies at the University of British Columbia. Her research investigates adolescent-parent interactions and the transfer and uptake of rights and responsibilities during the transition to adulthood. She is particularly interested in the management of information between adolescents and parents and how it, in turn, influences actions such as identity construction and resource sharing.

Ladislav Valach is Oberassistant at the Institute of Psychology, Psychopathology and Clinical Intervention, University Zurich and a private practitioner. He is a founding member of the Aeschi Group on Meeting the Suicidal Person. His current interests include questions on organization and flow of actions, projects and long-term processes such as career, health, suicide, work, and life enhancement. Together with his colleagues he deals with practical, theoretical and methodological issues in his writing, teaching, discussing, counseling and psychotherapy.

Preface5
Contents8
1 Transition to Adulthood: Introduction9
Definition of Transition to Adulthood9
North American Cultural Context10
Perspectives on the Transition to Adulthood12
Life Events12
Rites of Passage13
Psychosocial Maturity14
Summary14
Why a Different Approach?15
2 Transition to Adulthood as Goal-Directed Action18
The Action-Theoretical Paradigm for Understanding Transitions to Adulthood19
Successful Transition to Adulthood22
The Processes of Successful Transitioning to Adulthood25
Process Issues25
Coordination and Compatibility25
Communication26
Steering Processes26
Control and Regulation Processes26
Monitoring Processes27
Energizing Processes28
3 Action and the Practice of Counseling for Transitions29
Counseling for Transition from the Action-Theory Perspective32
Understanding Counseling as a Goal-Directed Process32
Empirical Methods to Support Understanding Counseling as a Goal-Directed Process33
The Self-Confrontation Interview34
Observing35
Counseling's First Task: Linking Counseling and Transition (Life Processes)36
Counseling's Second Task: Identifying Systems and Levels of Projects and Action36
Relational Perspective38
Assessing and Intervening38
Counseling's Third Task: Dealing with Emotion and Emotional Memory38
Counseling's Fourth Task: Dealing with Suboptimal and Detrimental Actions, Projects, and Careers40
Counseling's Fifth Task: Creating and Maintaining the Working Alliance40
Conclusion41
4 Studying Transition Processes43
Example 144
Example 246
The Action-Project Method47
Formulating Research Questions47
Unit of Analysis48
Data Gathering48
Data Sources49
Implementing Procedures50
Analysis51
Naïve Observation51
Analysis Products52
Value and Limitations of the Method54
Conclusion55
5 Relationships56
Relationship57
Expectations and Expectation Violations59
Relationship and Context60
Communication61
Power63
Case Example65
Conclusion66
6 Emotion and the Transition to Adulthood69
Emotion as Contributing to the Transition Project70
Emotional Disturbance71
Emotional Intelligence and Emotion Regulation72
Parental Influence on Transition Processes73
Action Theory and Emotion73
Emotion as a Social Process75
Case Example75
The Transition Project77
Parental Emotion Regulation78
Youth Emotion Regulation78
Joint Actions79
Grades and the Nursing Program80
Summer Jobs80
Motorcycles and Independence81
Moving Toward Marriage82
Discussion83
Emotion, Relationship, and the Transition Project84
Working with Emotion in Transition Counseling85
Identify Goals, Steps, and Emotions85
Explore the Goal-Directed Nature of Disagreement85
Identify Emotional Disturbance as a Joint Process86
Parent as Emotional Regulator86
Decide How to Share Emotion Regulation87
Explore Emotional as Well as Physical Distance87
Use Emotion to Energize Positive Action88
The Action-Project Method as Intervention88
Self-Confrontation as Intervention88
Therapeutically Monitored Projects89
Conclusion89
7 Identity90
Identity in Late Modern Societies90
Action Theory and Identity92
Identity Construction Example 194