Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

Chapter 15- Key Terms Matching

AB
self theoriesTheories of late adulthood that emphasize the core self, or the search to maintain one's integrity and identity.
integrity versus despairThe final stage of Erik Erikson's developmental sequence, in which older adults seek to integrate their unique experiences with their vision of community.
continuity theoryThe theory that each person experiences the changes of late adulthood and behaves toward others in a way that is consistent with his or her behavior in earlier periods of life.
positivity effectThe tendency for elderly people to perceive, prefer, and remember positive images and experiences more than negative ones.
stratification theoriesTheories that emphasize that social forces, particularly those related to a person's social stratum, or social category, limit individual choices and affect a person's ability to function in late adulthood as past stratification continues to limit life in various ways.
disengagement theoryThe view that aging makes a person's social sphere increasingly narrow, resulting in role relinquishment, withdrawal, and passivity.
activity theoryThe view that elderly people want and need to remain active in a variety of social spheres--with relatives, friends, and community groups--and become withdrawn only unwillingly, as a result of ageism.
aging in placeRemaining in the same home and community in later life, adjusting but not leaving when health fades.
naturally occurring retirement community (NORC)A neighborhood or apartment complex whose population is mostly retired people who moved to the location as younger adults and never left.
AARPA U.S. organization of people aged 50 and older that advocates for the elderly.
filial responsibilityThe obligation of adult children to care for their aging parents.
frail elderlyPeople over age 65, and often over age 85, who are physically infirm, very ill, or cognitively disabled.
activities of daily life (ADLs)Actions that are important to indpendent living, typically identified as five tasks of self-care: eating, bathing, toileting, dressing, and transferring from a bed to a chair.
instrumental activities of daily life (IADLs)Actions (for example, paying bills and driving a car) that are important to independent living and that require some initellectual competence and forethought.
assisted livingA living arrangement for elderly people that combines privacy and independence with medical supervision.


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Metropolitan Community College

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