People of all age groups and backgrounds can find themselves victims of peer pressure. However, people usually relate better to peers of their own age group. In this essay, we are going to examine the effects of peer pressure on 3 age groups – pre-adolescents, adolescents, and adults.
Peer pressure can affect people in different ways – directly, indirectly, and within individual. Direct peer pressure comes about when someone tells an individual what he or she should be doing. In contrast, indirect peer pressure may not be very evident to the individual. When a person interacts with a group of people who have particular habits and engage in particular activities, he or she might be influenced to follow suit. Individual peer pressure arises when one feels different from the rest of the group and does things to ensure that he or she conforms to the others.
Lev Vygotsky’s main theoretical framework proposes that social interaction is critical to the development of cognition He states that “Every function in the child’s cultural development appears twice: first, on the social level, and later, on the individual level; first between people (interpsychological) and later inside the child (intrapsychological).” Vygotsky came out with concept of “zone of proximal development” (ZPD), which is the level of development attained when the children engage in social behavior (the distance between what a child can do alone and what the child can do with help). Hence, pre-adolescents look to their peers for help and