About the Authors
Preface
Acknowledgements
Podcast List
PART I. What is Lifespan Development?
Chapter 1. Lifespan in Context
Chapter 2. The Roots of Lifespan Developmental Theories
Chapter 3. Cultural and Contextual Development Models
PART II. Ages and Stages
Chapter 4. Cultural and Contextual Factors of Infancy through Early
Childhood
Chapter 5. Developmental Theories of Infancy through Early
Childhood
Chapter 6. Cultural and Contextual Factors of Middle Childhood
through Adolescence
Chapter 7. Developmental Theories of Middle Childhood through
Adolescence
Chapter 8. Cultural and Contextual Factors of Emerging Adulthood
through Early Adulthood
Chapter 9. Developmental Theories of Emerging Adulthood through
Early Adulthood
Chapter 10. Cultural and Contextual Factors of Middle Adulthood
Chapter 11. Developmental Theories of Middle Adulthood
Chapter 12. Cultural and Contextual Factors of Late Adulthood
through End of Life
Chapter 13. Developmental Theories of Late Adulthood through End of
Life
Index
Kelly Coker, PhD, LCMHC, NCC, BC-TMH, is a cis-gender white female
in midlife. She is a professor and associate chair of the
counseling program at Palo Alto University. She is also a fierce
and loyal wife, mother, sister, daughter, and aunt. Kelly has been
a counselor educator for more years than she can count, and as part
of this work has published and presented a lot. She loves nothing
more than training emerging counselors how to be their best selves,
how to work with humility and compassion, and how to always strive
to meet their clients where they are. As a licensed clinical mental
health counselor (LCMHC) and Board-certified Tele-Mental health
counselor, Kelly works with a small handful of clients in a
tele-mental health private practice. She is amazed by how often
consideration of phases of life enters into her work. It is for
this reason that Kelly wanted to engage in this exciting project
with three other warrior women. She would love to hear from you,
students and educators, about how this book informs your learning,
your clinical work, and your understanding of self.
Kristi B. Cannon, PhD, LPC, NCC, is a cis-gender, white female
straddling the lines of early and middle adulthood—feeling a foot
firmly planted in each camp and the associated lack of balance this
causes nearly every day. She is a counselor educator, licensed
professional counselor, and current Director of Counseling Programs
at Southern New Hampshire University. Inspired, first and foremost,
by the infinite curiosity, wisdom, and beautiful insight of the
early and middle childhood years—those associated with her precious
three daughters—Kristi has also spent considerable time
specializing in clinical work with adolescents and women's
infertility issues. Her passion for this project came out of a
desire to better reflect the meaningful variations in life
experiences she witnessed in her community and clinical practice
and ones not often or frequently-enough named in graduate
textbooks. As a woman of significant unearned privilege, it is her
goal to continue learning and challenging herself every day so that
she may be a better partner, parent, friend, ally, counselor,
educator, and human. Her collaboration with the amazing women on
this project has certainly contributed, and she hopes that you take
some of this away from this book as well.
Savitri V. Dixon-Saxon, PhD, LCMHC, is a cis-gender female and
African American single mother, daughter, sister, and friend (her
most important intersecting identities). Her roles as the mother to
an emerging adult and daughter to parents in late adulthood have
fueled her passion for this book. Through workshops, speaking
engagements, and articles, Savitri has provided her expertise on a
variety of topics related to diversity, grief, positive body-image,
single-parenthood, and intergenerational workplace dynamics. A
counselor educator and licensed clinical mental health counselor,
she has a thirty-year career in higher education in student and
academic affairs and is currently a Vice Provost at Walden
University providing oversight to the Colleges of Nursing, Social
and Behavioral Health, and Allied Health. She is grateful for what
she has learned from this co-author sisterhood and listening to the
experts who have provided their perspectives from the field. It is
her hope that readers will commit to a lifetime of learning because
people and society are dynamic and require constant study. She is
also hopeful that more helpers will embrace working with those in
late adulthood. They have so much wisdom to offer.
Karen M. Roller, PhD, MFT, is a cis-het, white, temporarily
able-bodied tomboy whose body increasingly reminds her she is now
in midlife. Born into the middle class and raised Catholic, she
aims to retain the service orientation of that tradition's true
Teachers while she spends her adult pennies traveling the inhabited
world unlearning the colonial aspects of it and learning how the
rest of the world embodies connection with the Divine; this makes
her a yogic Sufi with an environmental conservation bent. She is an
associate professor of counseling at Palo Alto University, and
clinical coordinator at Family Connections, a parent-involvement
preschool serving low-resource migrant families in the San
Francisco Bay Area. As a bilingual marriage and family therapist
and supervisor who has been primarily field-based, she has spent a
lot of years facilitating sessions in tri- and quad-generational
homes, foster homes, hospitals, and community-based settings; this
has made her a trauma-informed, cross-cultural attachment nerd.
Humbled by the impact of how oppression, cultures, and quality of
caregiving relationships inform the sense of self across the
lifespan, she has been blessed to learn from babies, children,
teens, and adults through each phase of life to death. She is a
fortunate daughter, sister, grandchild, niece, cousin, co-worker,
friend, and (now most importantly) mom. Collaborating with this
wise and inspiring writing sisterhood has enlivened her to more
deeply embrace what life may send her way.
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