Title Paauglių poreikių konfliktai kaip aktuali dorinė problema /
Translation of Title Needs’ conflicts of teenagers as the problem of morality.
Authors Čiuladienė, Gražina
DOI 10.15388/ActPaed.2007.18.9657
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Is Part of Acta paedagogica Vilnensia : mokslo darbai.. Vilnius : Vilniaus universiteto leidykla. 2007, t. 18, p. 55-65.. ISSN 1392-5016. eISSN 1648-665X
Keywords [eng] teenager ; conflicting behavior ; aggressive
Abstract [eng] The article seeks 1) to bring out peculiarities of adolescents’ conflicting action when their contradictors become classmates, teachers and parents, 2) to analyse the level of the frustration of teenagers needs’. The type of investigating adolescents’ conflicts is determined by needs’ conflict. It was defined in the article as conflict caused by classmates, teachers, parents behaviour, frustrating adolescents’ needs: 1) need for feeling grown-up, 2) need for emphaty, 3) need for appreciation, 4) need for safety. Three types of conflicting teenagers’ behaviour is determined in the research: 1) aggressive treatment 2) egressive treatment 3) regressive treatment. The investigation was carried out with the 586 pupils aged from 12 to 16 years (7th–9th grades), learning in town, regional and country Lithuanian secondary schools. The link between adolescents’ conflicting action and frustration of adolescents’ needs is established. According to data analysis, the classmates’ behaviour, frustrating adolescents’ needs, most of all conditions the teenagers egressive classmates’ treatment. Dissatisfaction with teachers’ behaviour mostly influences adolescents’ egressive, self-aggressive and verbal aggressive treatment. The greatest influence on the adolescents’ conflicting action has the parents’ behavior, frustrating adolescents ‘needs. It has also been established that the teenagers’ need for emphaty as well as the need of appreciation is frustrated mostly by teachers. According to data analysis there are 27 percent of pupils who often feel frustrated lacking the emphaty and about 24 percent of pupils who often feel frustrated lacking the appreciation interacting with teachers. The need for feeling grown-up is mostly dissatisfied interacting with parents: about 22 percent of pupils often feel frustrated lacking appreciation of their independent decisions. The need for [...].
Published Vilnius : Vilniaus universiteto leidykla
Type Journal article
Language Lithuanian
Publication date 2007
CC license CC license description