Teaching Adolescents: A General Background
Teaching Adolescents: A General Background
Teaching Adolescents: A General Background
Adolescence could be compared with a process of getting attitude and beliefs that
youth need to participate in the society, is also a period of fast growth, this is
crucial and everybody has to pass through in our life and determines how better we
are in the youth and adult period.
Biological, psychosocial and cognitive changes that begin during puberty and
continue throughout adolescence. Adolescents experience dramatic physical
growth and development during puberty. It is the transition phase between
childhood and adulthood.
Stanley Hall (the father of adolescent psychology) stated that its a time of storm
and stress. In terms of a time frame, adolescence begins around the onset of
puberty (age 11-12) and ends during the late teen years and young adulthood (age
19-20).
As children grow and enter the adolescent stage of their life, certain developmental
aspects proceed with a transformational quality, primarily: the physical, cognitive,
and psychosocial aspect of development. Every individual normally faces a series
of developmental tasks and learning during adolescence. Some of these major
processes include the movement towards independence, formation of sexual
identity, developing career interests, and the integration of morals and ethics
(Canadian Parents Online Inc, 2001).
Middle school roughly coincides with students entering the formal operations
stage of Piagets cognitive development theory, at roughly the age of 11. The
formal operations period is the beginning of the highest level of cognition, as
viewed by Piaget, a stage characterized by the growing ability to think
hypothetically and abstractly. Children develop a capacity for manipulating
information and using symbols, and their thought processes are at the ultimate
level of intellectual development.
Kohlbergs (1969) three levels of moral reasoning into consideration, middle school
aged children are entering the conventional level. This level is further divided into
two stages----- stage 3 (children judging intentions of self and others, evaluating
whether that means they are good or not) and stage 4 (maintaining social order,
performing their duty). Eventually, these children will enter the post conventional
level where focus develops around the welfare of society, adherence to the law,
rational thinking and internalized standards. (Papalia, Olds, & Feldman, 2001).
David Elkind (1984), based on his research, presents a view of adolescence that
classrooms are all too familiar with. He devised a list of characteristics that
represents immaturity in adolescent thought, primarily:
(McLaughlin, 1990) argue that teenagers are intrinsically better language learners
than either younger or older learners, since a teenager already has a well-
developed cognitive base and learning skills. On the other hand, the linguistic
sophistication required of teenagers is greater than that required of young children.
While children may only need to be surrounded by language, in a positive climate,
to acquire a language, teenagers may need much more than linguistic exposure
-the student must be able to be involved and engaged with communicative events
in order to profit from them and develop communicative competence. The length of
time it will take individual students to develop this competence cannot be predicted
accurately, especially for teenagers who have so much to learn about academic
English
Conclusion
It is undoubtedly that there are many factors that affect the adolescents learning
process, as teachers we need to realize that learning a language is not always the
result of teaching, we need to understand the complex of learning language from a
variety of perspectives, since it involves different factors.Teachers must be aware
of the problems that adolescents have in their development, so it is necessary to
find the methodology that suits their learning needs, where we must take into
account all the factors that go according to their needs such as motivation, their
personal emotions and their cognitive level in order to search for the best
strategies to get the communicative competence.
References.
Walqui, A. Second Language Learning and the Schooling of Immigrant Teenagers: Focus on
Prevailing Misconceptions. Taken from:
http://web.stanford.edu/~hakuta/www/archives/syllabi/Docs/Walqui1.htm