Erik Erikson’s Eight Stages of Development

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Opening Erik Erikson stated that there are eight psychosocial stages of development. Within each of these stages, he states that there is a crisis that must be resolved. Trust vs. mistrust is the first, which occurs from the time you were born to about one year of age. From there you move on to autonomy vs. shame and doubt, which occurs from ages one to three. Then there is initiative vs. guilt, which occurs from age’s three to six. After that it is industry vs. inferiority, which occurs between ages, is six to twelve. Fowling that is intimacy vs. isolation, which occurs between ages eighteen to thirty. Then comes generativity vs. stagnation, which occurs between ages thirty and into late adulthood. The last stage is integrity vs. despair, which occurs in late adulthood. Erikson eight stages of development occur in every one. Your friends and family are all going through different parts of these stages right now. Erikson’s Life Erik Erikson was born in Frankfurt Germany June 15th, 1902. His biological father abandoned his mother before he was born. His mother, on her own, raised him Jewish. When he was three years old, his mother married his pediatrician Dr. Theodor Heomberger. While going to school his core classes he took were art and English classes. After he graduated high school, he wanted to become an artist. After traveling Europe for a year, barely making it by and homeless, he enrolled into an art school. Once he graduated art school, he started to teach art to kids at Vienna. While he was teaching there, he became interested in psychoanalysis. He was admitted into the Psychoanalytic Institute at Vienna as a student, this is where he meets his wife Joan. The fear of Nazis made Erikson and his wife flea to Boston. While ... ... middle of paper ... ... A Study in Validation of a Measure. Douvan, E. (1997). Erik Erikson: Critical Times, Critical Theory. Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 28(1), 15-21. Munley, H., (1975) Erik erikson’s theory of psychosocial development and vocational behavior. US: American Psychological Association, Vol22(4), 314-319. doi:10.1037/h0076749 Myers, D. G. (2010). Module 18. In Psychology in modules, ninth edition (pp. 200-204). New York, NY: Worth. Wagner, D., Lorion, P., & Shipley, E. (1983). Insomnia and psychosocial crisis: Two studies of Erikson's developmental theory. US: American Psychological Association, Vol51(4), 595-603. doi:10.1037/0022- 006X.51.4.595 Whitbourne, K., & Waterman, S. (1979). Psychosocial development during the adult years: Age and cohort comparisons. US: American Psychological Association, Vol15(4), 373- 378. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.15.4.373

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