Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- I Regulation of Self, Action, and Development
- 1 Decomposing Self-Regulation and Self-Control: The Volitional Components Inventory
- 2 Developmental Regulation in Adulthood: Selection and Compensation via Primary and Secondary Control
- 3 Development of Regulatory Focus: Promotion and Prevention as Ways of Living
- 4 Commentary: Human Psychological Needs and the Issues of Volition, Control, and Outcome Focus
- II Social Determinants of Motivation
- III Functional and Dysfunctional Control-Related Behavior in Childhood
- IV Developmental Goals in Adulthood
- Name Index
- Subject Index
2 - Developmental Regulation in Adulthood: Selection and Compensation via Primary and Secondary Control
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- I Regulation of Self, Action, and Development
- 1 Decomposing Self-Regulation and Self-Control: The Volitional Components Inventory
- 2 Developmental Regulation in Adulthood: Selection and Compensation via Primary and Secondary Control
- 3 Development of Regulatory Focus: Promotion and Prevention as Ways of Living
- 4 Commentary: Human Psychological Needs and the Issues of Volition, Control, and Outcome Focus
- II Social Determinants of Motivation
- III Functional and Dysfunctional Control-Related Behavior in Childhood
- IV Developmental Goals in Adulthood
- Name Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Abstract
A life-span theory of control (J. Heckhausen & Schulz, 1995) is presented along with a set of empirical findings on the theory's implications for developmental regulation. Human behavior in general and human development in particular have to fulfill two fundamental requirements. Investment of behavioral resources (time, effort, skill, motivation) has to be selective, and inevitable failure experiences need to be compensated to protect motivational resources for action. The life-span theory of control distinguishes between primary control and secondary control. Primary control is directed at the external world and refers to attempts to change the environment in line with the individual's goals. Secondary control addresses internal processes and serves to minimize losses in, to maintain, and to expand existing levels of primary control. Both primary and secondary control processes serve to achieve selectivity in resource investment and the compensation of failure. Thus, four strategies of developmental regulation can be identified: selective primary control, compensatory primary control, selective secondary control, and compensatory secondary control. These four strategies are regulated by a higher-order process that aims at optimizing primary control across the life span. At different points in the life span, developmental regulation has to be adapted to shifting levels of primary control potential across age-related changes. Moreover, different socioeconomic life ecologies provide structures of opportunities and constraints, which the individual has to take into account for successful regulation of development.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Motivation and Self-Regulation across the Life Span , pp. 50 - 77Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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