Life Span Development: Characteristics, Developmental Tasks, and Promoting Psychological Well-Being

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📘 4.4 Life Span Development: Characteristics, Developmental Tasks, and Promoting Psychological Well-Being

🧠 What is Life Span Development?

Life Span Development refers to the continuous, lifelong process of physical, cognitive, emotional, and social growth and change across various stages of life — from conception to old age.


🌱 I. Key Characteristics of Life Span Development

Characteristic Description Example
Lifelong Begins at conception and continues till death Changes in memory from childhood to old age
Multidimensional Includes biological, cognitive, social, and emotional changes A child grows in height (physical), language (cognitive), and empathy (emotional)
Multidirectional Some abilities improve while others decline Vocabulary may increase, reflexes may slow down
Plastic Capacity for change; not fixed Old adults can learn new skills via neuroplasticity
Contextual Influenced by culture, family, history, and society A tribal child socialised differently than a metro child

🧩 II. Major Stages and Developmental Tasks (by Erikson, Havighurst, Piaget)

Stage Age Developmental Tasks Indian Context
Infancy 0–2 yrs Trust vs. Mistrust (Erikson) Breastfeeding, mother-infant bonding
Early Childhood 2–6 yrs Autonomy vs. Shame, motor skills, toilet training Anganwadi exposure, language development
Middle Childhood 6–12 yrs Industry vs. Inferiority, formal education Competitive exams, peer group bonding
Adolescence 13–19 yrs Identity vs. Role Confusion Gender identity, career planning
Early Adulthood 20–40 yrs Intimacy vs. Isolation, career establishment Marriage, job, UPSC attempts
Middle Adulthood 40–60 yrs Generativity vs. Stagnation Parenting, financial planning
Late Adulthood 60+ yrs Integrity vs. Despair Retirement, reflection on life, coping with loss

📝 Developmental tasks are culturally defined. In India, family pressure may accelerate or delay these tasks.


🧠 III. Theories Relevant to Life Span Development

  1. Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory – Each life stage has a psychosocial conflict that shapes personality.
  2. Piaget’s Cognitive Development – Focus on how children acquire knowledge in stages.
  3. Levinson’s Seasons of Life – Describes life in terms of stable periods and transitions, especially in adulthood.

🌈 IV. Promoting Psychological Well-Being Across the Life Span

🧒 Childhood

  • Play-based learning for creativity
  • Nutrition & care (ICDS, POSHAN Abhiyan)

🧑 Adolescence

  • Counselling in schools (Manodarpan initiative)
  • Addressing peer pressure, body image issues

👩 Adulthood

  • Work-life balance, stress management
  • Marital therapy, parenting workshops

👵 Old Age

  • Social support, day-care centres
  • Cognitive stimulation to delay dementia
  • Programmes like Senior Citizen Maintenance Act, Vayoshreshtha Samman

🇮🇳 Indian Case Studies

  • NCERT Life Skills Curriculum helps adolescents manage emotional and social development.
  • NGOs like HelpAge India promote active aging via physical, financial, and emotional well-being.
  • The Delhi Government’s Happiness Curriculum (2018) supports students’ psychological well-being.

📚 Practical Examples

  1. Village child with poor nutrition but emotional bonding → resilient despite developmental risk.
  2. Urban adolescent facing parental pressure for career → identity crisis, depression.
  3. Retired person joining laughter club → improved emotional regulation and social bonding.

🎯 UPSC Mains Application

Use in:

  • GS Paper II (education, mental health policies)
  • GS Paper IV (human values, empathy, aging)
  • Essay paper on “Journey of life”, “Mental health as national wealth”

✅ Summary

  • Life span development is a holistic, lifelong journey with stage-specific tasks.
  • Culture and social systems shape these tasks uniquely in the Indian context.
  • Psychological well-being must be promoted through policies and awareness at each stage.

✍️ Mains Answer Writing Format

Intro: Define life span development
Body:

  • Key characteristics
  • Stage-wise tasks (with examples)
  • Indian context and schemes
    Conclusion: Development must be balanced and supported to ensure national mental wealth

 

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