Identity statuses as developmental trajectories: A five-wave longitudinal study in early to middle and middle to late adolescents

Publication date

2012-08

Authors

Meeus, WimISNI 0000000034127027
van de Schoot, RensISNI 0000000393562696
Keijsers, LoesISNI 0000000389315975
Branje, SusanORCID 0000-0002-9999-5313ISNI 0000000112866969

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Article
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Abstract

This study tested whether Marcia’s original identity statuses of achievement, moratorium, early closure (a new label for foreclosure), and diffusion, can be considered identity status trajectories. That is, we examined whether these statuses are distinct and relatively stable, over-time configurations of commitment strength, levels of in-depth exploration of present commitments, and consideration of alternative commitments. The study examined identity development in a five-wave study of 923 early-to-middle (49.3% female) and 390 middle-to-late adolescents (56.7% female), covering the ages of 12–20. Using Latent class growth analysis (LCGA), the authors found that Marcia’s (1966) statuses are indeed identity status trajectories. Two kinds of moratorium were also found: the classical moratorium and searching moratorium. Support was found for Waterman’s developmental hypothesis of the identity status model: the number of achievers was significantly higher, and the number of diffusions lower, in middle-to-late adolescence than in early-to-middle adolescence. Females were more often in the advanced identity status trajectories, and stable differences were found between the trajectories in psychosocial adjustment. Study findings highlight that identity formation should be conceptualized as an over-time process.

Keywords

Psychosocial adjustment, Latent class growth analysis (LCGA), Identity, Identity status trajectories, Adolescence

Citation

Meeus, W H J, Van de Schoot, R, Keijsers, L & Branje, S J T 2012, 'Identity statuses as developmental trajectories : A five-wave longitudinal study in early to middle and middle to late adolescents', Journal of Youth and Adolescence, vol. 41, no. 8, pp. 1008-1021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-011-9730-y