Publication | Closed Access
Goals and Everyday Problem Solving: Examining the Link between Age-Related Goals and Problem-Solving Strategy Use
28
Citations
38
References
2008
Year
Project ManagementGoal SettingAutonomySocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyAutonomy GoalsCognitive DevelopmentEveryday Problem SolvingAchievement GoalBehavioral SciencesMotivationAge-related GoalsStrategyAdult DevelopmentMotivational TheoryPerformance StudiesBusinessProblem SolvingSelf-focused Problem SolvingLater AdulthoodAchievement MotivationProblem-solving Strategy Use
Qualitative interviews on family and financial problems from 332 adolescents, young, middle-aged, and older adults, demonstrated that developmentally relevant goals predicted problem-solving strategy use over and above problem domain. Four focal goals concerned autonomy, generativity, maintaining good relationships with others, and changing another person. We examined both self- and other-focused problem-solving strategies. Autonomy goals were associated with self-focused instrumental problem solving and generative goals were related to other-focused instrumental problem solving in family and financial problems. Goals of changing another person were related to other-focused instrumental problem solving in the family domain only. The match between goals and strategies, an indicator of problem-solving adaptiveness, showed that young individuals displayed the greatest match between autonomy goals and self-focused problem solving, whereas older adults showed a greater match between generative goals and other-focused problem solving. Findings speak to the importance of considering goals in investigations of age-related differences in everyday problem solving.
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