Schaie, K. Warner : Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Willis, Sherry L. : Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Preface
PREFACE
The "graying of America" proceeds at a rapid pace. The post-World War II baby boom generation, comprising
1 out of every 3 people in the United States, is now at middle age. One out of every 4 Americans is already 50
years of age or older. By the year 2025, 64 million Americans will be 65 years of age or older.
We are finally beginning to come to grips with the implications of the burgeoning population of older people.
Our increasing longevity and the need for understanding its ramifications have also resulted in considerable scientific
research, especially during the last four decades. The demand has grown on college and university campuses for
courses that focus their attention on the broad period of adulthood. Exploring the development of an individual's
career, marriage, family life, and psychological functioning as he or she is affected by a rapidly changing society
have become vital issues.
The objective of this textbook is to encourage the student to consider the phenomenon of adult development and
aging from a behavioral point of view in a readable but comprehensive and scientifically well-documented manner.
We introduce current theory and research on the major psychological issues, and we provide background on those
social and biological aspects of development that are essential to understanding behavioral age changes.
We continue to believe that the study of adult development is best served by using a combined chronological
and topical approach that we have consistently used in previous editions and the sequence of presentation first
introduced in the third edition has been retained. Adult Development and Aging, fifth edition begins with
an introductory chapter that sets the stage for our study. This chapter examines demographic changes in our society
and the current state of research in the field. To provide an overview, we next consider the broad issues of adult
development in three chronological chapters: young adulthood, middle age, and late life. We then provide a research
methods chapter that focuses on the quasi-experimental methods prominent in the study of development, and also
provides a brief exposition of relevant experimental designs. Our experience in teaching earlier editions of the
text suggested that students were often overwhelmed when research methods were introduced in the first chapter
before some substantive material was covered. The methodology chapter is now placed at the point where that material
seems to be needed for a proper understanding of the topical chapters that follow.
The topical chapters are placed roughly in the life-stage order at which particular developmental processes
become most salient. First, we consider topics that are important in young adulthood: families, gender issues,
and careers. The gender issues chapter comes immediately after the family chapter because issues first raised under
the rubric of the family are considered further in the chapter on men and women. The second group of topics consists
of personality development, motivation, learning and memory, and intellectual development, areas in which age changes
become important as people move from midlife into old age. The final three chapters cover lifelong processes that
become most salient in old age: biological aging, mental disorders associated with old age, and bereavement.
The material that we cover in the topical chapters, however, is not limited just to the life stage within which
it happens to be particularly relevant. The flow of human lives can not be segmented that easily. Initial career
choices, for example, may be of paramount importance to young adults, but matters relating to career development
permeate much of adulthood. Although our chapter on careers is placed early in the book, it also includes material
on occupational development in middle age, career reevaluation, change in later life, and the retirement experience.
What we hope to accomplish is to present an integrated picture of the psychological processes involved in adult
development and the stages of human experience. We therefore, whenever appropriate, use a life-span approach in
following psychological processes as they develop from young adulthood to the end of life.
During the five years since the fourth edition of this book was published, research on aging has continued at
a furious pace. In this fifth edition, we have attempted to incorporate new findings that occurred during the previous
decade as well as to provide further documentation for our discussion. Unfortunately, much of the newly added material
can not always replace older findings. Thus the research literature cited in this volume keeps expanding and now
numbers over 2,000 references. In order to understand behavioral aging, we continue to provide limited discussions
of the necessary context to be found in concurrent biological and societal changes. We have further updated the
material on family relationships in rapidly changing circumstances, such as the increasing number of women in the
workforce and the increasing frequency of dual careers. And we continue to monitor the recent advances in work
on Alzheimer's disease and the relationship between cardiovascular disease and behavior.
The methodology chapter covers design issues important to descriptive studies of human aging, but it also summarizes
principles of research employing experimental paradigms. A thorough understanding of human development requires
data that are collected over time on the same individuals, the longitudinal approach. Wherever possible, we therefore
present data from at least short-term longitudinal follow-up studies. We have tried to present a sound and thorough
review of scientific research methods that avoids jargon and unnecessary technical detail while providing the student
with the essential details needed to understand the studies described in this volume as well as other relevant
research literature.
Tables and graphs have been updated wherever more recent information was available. However, the reader should
note that the results of the 2000 census were not available at the time this edition went into production, and
population figures must therefore rely on census publications from the 1990s. The illustration program was also
reviewed and substitutions were made where we thought improvement was indicated.
In order to keep the size of this textbook manageable, we have once again tried to make room for the most recent
work by trimming some older materials that are now primarily of historical interest or material that is not directly
essential to an understanding of the aging processes. For students who wish to pursue major issues in greater depth,
we continue to include suggestions for further reading at the end of each chapter and a listing of major reference
volumes and journals at the end of the book.
We are pleased to know that previous editions of Adult Development and Aging have had wide circulation
outside of North America. But we must admit that the book retains a somewhat "Americanocentric" orientation
and content. Although the great bulk of the psychological aging literature continues to originate in North America,
there has been a steadily increasing amount of work on aging in Europe and elsewhere. In the present edition, we
continue our attempt to overcome our past avoidance behavior by including materials on international studies in
each chapter whenever possible and by including citations to books and journals published outside of North America.
This effort was enhanced by the fact that significant portions of this edition were written in Berlin, Germany,
while we were guests of the Max-Planck-Institute for Human Development and the Division of Geropsychology of the
Geriatric Klinikum at the Free University of Berlin. We would like to thank our hosts Paul Baltes and Jacqui Smith
as well as the many researchers and students who were stimulating conversation partners during our stay in Berlin.
Creating and revising a textbook requires the harmonious efforts of many skilled professionals. We would like
to acknowledge the contribution of reviewers who read all or part of the manuscript and helped to improve both
coverage and clarity: Marion Beaver, University of Pittsburgh; Joan Erber, Florida International; James Blackburn,
University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee; Marion Hunt, Dakota Wesleyan University; Dale Lund, University of Utah. We
wish to thank our editor Jennifer Gilliland and her assistant Nicole Girrbach. Anna Shuey handled the clerical
and technical details associated with revising the manuscript, with assistance from Judy Davis who assembled the
indexes.
Much remains to be learned about adult development and aging, but a clearer picture has begun to emerge as the
results of intensive scientific research accumulate. The picture that we present is as comprehensive and accurate
as we could make it at this point in time. It may often differ from some of the common stereotypes about adult
development and aging. Our interpretation of the research literature is somewhat more optimistic than many popular,
often erroneously held beliefs, but it also conveys a realistic appraisal of the many problems the elderly must
face in today's society. It is our view that the life course from young adulthood to old age is not so much a series
of "life crises" as a progression of gains and losses, of challenges and of opportunities. We hope to
convince you that even the final years of life can be filled with substantial personal creativity and satisfaction.
We will be gratified if this book can help you to see the potential richness of your own life in the years to come
as well as to understand the lives of those older adults you may love and/or care for. We hope, therefore, that
you will find Adult Development and Aging's contents both enlightening and encouraging.
K.W.S.
S.L.W.
Summary
For junior/senior-level courses in Psychology of Aging and Adulthood.
Incorporating both chronological and topical approaches, this comprehensive, scientifically oriented text considers
the phenomenon of adult development from a behavioral point of view. It introduces current theory and research
on the major psychological issues, and provides background on the social and biological aspects of development
that is essential to students' understanding of behavioral age changes. Written to be thorough yet avoid jargon,
this book's contents will enlighten and encourage students to seek a career in the study of aging.
NEW--Updated research findings--Includes over 2000 references to new and classic research literature.
Provides students with limited discussions of relevant material found in current biological and societal changes.
NEW--Completely revised theories of aging (Chapter 1).
Sets the stage for a better understanding of adult development.
NEW--Updated tables, graphs, and illustrations.
Provides most up-to-date, clearly organized information available.
NEW--Increased coverage of international studies.
Reflects the steadily increasing amount of work on aging in Europe and elsewhere.
A chronological and topical approach.
Gives students a description of the life span stages, and an integrated picture of the psychological processes
involved in adult development and the stages of human experience.
Emphasis on longitudinal research.
Presents data that is collected over time on the same individuals, in order to give students a better understanding
of human development.
Detailed discussions of developmental research designs.
Familiarizes students with the issues important to descriptive and experimental studies of human aging.
Suggestions for further reading.
Offers students a valuable resource of primary sources for term papers, projects, and more in-depth study.
Table of Contents
1. Adult Development and Aging: An Introduction.
2. Young Adulthood: Independence Versus Intimacy.
3. The Middle Years: Responsibility and Failure.
4. Late Life: Reintegration or Despair.
5. Research Methodology in Adult Development and Aging.
6. Families: Interdependent Relationships.
7. Men and Women: Together and Apart.
8. Careers: Earning a Living.
9. Personality Development: Continuity and Change.
10. Motivation: Drives, Beliefs, and Goals.
11. Learning and Memory: Acquiring and Retaining Information.
12. Intellectual Development: The Display of Competence.
13. Biological Development: The Aging Body.
14. Mental Disorders: Failing to Cope.
15. The End of Life: Death and Bereavement.