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Developmental Trends: Thinking and Reasoning Skills at Different Age Levels (page 4)

By T. M McDevitt|J. E. Ormrod
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Late Adolescence (14–18)

What You Might Observe:

  • Abstract thought and scientific reasoning skills more prevalent, especially for topics about which adolescents have considerable knowledge
  • Idealistic notions tempered by more realistic considerations
  • Ability to perform many tasks in an adultlike manner

Diversity:

  • Abstract thinking tends to be more common in some content areas (e.g., mathematics, science) than in others (e.g., history, geography).
  • Formal operational reasoning skills are less likely to appear in cultures that don’t require those skills.
  • Teenagers’ proficiency in particular adult tasks varies considerably from individual to individual and from task to task.

Implications:

  • Study particular academic disciplines in depth; introduce complex and abstract explanations and theories.
  • Encourage discussions about social, political, and ethical issues; elicit multiple perspectives regarding these issues.
  • Involve adolescents in activities that are similar or identical to the things they will eventually do as adults.
  • Explain how experts in a field think about the tasks they perform.
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