Crisis Resolution & Demographic Variables
This study examined for relationships
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This study examined for relationships between Crisis Resolution and the demographic variables of age, educational background, religion and nature of retirement (voluntary or involuntary) on measures of life-satisfaction, death anxiety, and identification with the occupational role using a sample of male retirees. The conceptual framework of the study was the theory of Erik Erikson regarding the effects of the psychosocial crisis of old age (integrity versus despair) and the effects of crisis resolution on older people's sense of well being. All retirees (N=90) were at least 60 years of age or older and were drawn from three local agencies serving older people. Findings of the study supported Erikson's notion that life-satisfaction increases and death anxiety decreases for people who have successfully resolved the psychosocial crisis of old age. In addition, the results of the study indicated that demographic factors are associated with variance on measures of life satisfaction and death anxiety but not on a measure of identification with the occupational role. Moreover, crisis resolution was not found to be related to degree of identification with the occupational role. This study examined for associations between degree of death anxiety, degree of self-identification with one's occupational role, and life satisfaction in a sample of post-retirement males. These examinations were conducted i
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's degree of fear associated with loss of life (Templer, 1970). Death Anxiety will be operationally defined as retirees' scores on the Death Anxiety Scale.
Life Satisfaction: For the purposes of this study, life satisfaction is used to refer to the extent that one enjoys the activities associated with their daily life (Boyd & Koskela, 1970). The term is operationally defined as retirees' scores on the Life Satisfaction Index.
Retirees: In this study, this term was used to refer to retired males of sixty years of age or older.
Retirement: As used in this study, this term is conceptually defined as a process associated with the termination of one's social role as an economically employed worker in society (Eshleman, 1991). This process is said to consist of a pre-retirement stage, a retirement transition stage, and a post-retirement stage.
Worker Identification: This term was used in the study to refer to the extent to which retirees' concept of self is invested in their occupational role (Eshleman, 1991). The term was operationally defined as retirees' scores for two retirement items on the Demographic Data Sheet.
Organization of the Remainder of the Study
The first chapter of this research delineated the basic param
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Psychosocial Crisis, Robert Atchley, Ego Integrity, Research Approach, Satisfaction Index, Erik Erikson, Woods Witte, Anxiety Scale, Experience Retirement, Okamoto Yamamoto, life satisfaction, psychosocial crisis, death anxiety, crisis age, psychosocial crisis age, integrity versus, occupational role, life satisfaction index, satisfaction index, ego integrity, versus despair, integrity versus despair, life review, resolved psychosocial crisis, identification worker role,
Approximate Word count = 9652
Approximate Pages = 39 (250 words per page)
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