Saylor URL: http://www.saylor.org/books Saylor.org
the different possibilities into a single self-concept and a comfortable sense of identity (identity-
achievement status).
For teenagers, the peer group provides valuable information about the self-concept. For instance,
in response to the question “What were you like as a teenager? (e.g., cool, nerdy, awkward?),”
posed on the website Answerbag, one teenager replied in this way:
I’m still a teenager now, but from 8th–9th grade I didn’t really know what I wanted at all. I was
smart, so I hung out with the nerdy kids. I still do; my friends mean the world to me. But in the
middle of 8th I started hanging out with whom you may call the “cool” kids...and I also hung out
with some stoners, just for variety. I pierced various parts of my body and kept my grades up.
Now, I’m just trying to find who I am. I’m even doing my sophomore year in China so I can get a
better view of what I want. (Answerbag, 2007) [20]
Responses like this one demonstrate the extent to which adolescents are developing their self-
concepts and self-identities and how they rely on peers to help them do that. The writer here is
trying out several (perhaps conflicting) identities, and the identities any teen experiments with
are defined by the group the person chooses to be a part of. The friendship groups (cliques,
crowds, or gangs) that are such an important part of the adolescent experience allow the young
adult to try out different identities, and these groups provide a sense of belonging and acceptance
(Rubin, Bukowski, & Parker, 2006). [21] A big part of what the adolescent is learning
is social identity, the part of the self-concept that is derived from one’s group memberships.
Adolescents define their social identities according to how they are similar to and differ from
others, finding meaning in the sports, religious, school, gender, and ethnic categories they belong
to.
Developing Moral Reasoning: Kohlberg’s Theory
The independence that comes with adolescence requires independent thinking as well as the
development of morality—standards of behavior that are generally agreed on within a culture to
be right or proper. Just as Piaget believed that children’s cognitive development follows specific
patterns, Lawrence Kohlberg (1984) [22] argued that children learn their moral values through
active thinking and reasoning, and that moral development follows a series of stages. To study