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DEVELOPMENT OF ORIENTATION TO THE FUTURE DURING EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A FOUR‐YEAR LONGITUDINAL STUDY AND TWO CROSS‐SECTIONAL COMPARISONS
Author(s) -
Nurmi JariErik
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
international journal of psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1464-066X
pISSN - 0020-7594
DOI - 10.1080/00207594.1989.10600042
Subject(s) - optimism , psychology , future orientation , developmental psychology , life span , orientation (vector space) , longitudinal study , content (measure theory) , successful aging , social psychology , gerontology , medicine , geometry , mathematics , mathematical analysis , pathology
In 1982, fifty‐seven 11‐year‐old and forty‐eight 15‐year‐old adolescents were interviewed about their hopes and fears for the future. Similarly, in 1987, fifty‐seven 11‐year‐old and fifty‐six 15‐year‐old adolescents were interviewed. The content and extension of each hope and fear as well as the levels of planning, realization, internality, probability estimation and overall emotional evaluation were estimated from the answers. As expected, adolescents' hopes concerned major developmental tasks, i.e. occupation, education, family and property related topics. Both 11‐ and 15‐year‐olds extended their thinking to the same stage of their future life, about the age of twenty. A comparison of extension according to hope content showed that adolescents' orientation to the future reflected the ‘cultural prototype’ of expected life‐span development. Levels of planning, realization and knowledge concerning hopes increased with age as did internality and optimism concerning the future, especially among boys.

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