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Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development: CTET Exam Guide & PDF

R
Virat
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
3 MIN READ
Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development is a high-yield topic for the CTET exam. Explore this essential psychological theory with our detailed study notes, available in both Hindi and English PDF formats below.

Erikson’s Theory

  • Biological because of belief that there are innate drives to develop social relationships and that these promote survival (Darwinism)
  • Divided life span into eight psychosocial stages, each associated with a different drive and a problem or crisis to resolve
  • Outcome of each stage varies along a continuum from positive to negative

Erikson’s stages of Psychosocial Development

  1. Stage 1 (birth–1) Trust vs. Mistrust 
  • Infants must rely on others for care
  • Consistent and dependable caregiving and meeting infant needs leads to a sense of trust
  • Infants who are not well cared for will develop mistrust
  1. Stage 2 (1–3 years) Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt 
  • Children are discovering their own independence
  • Those given the opportunity to experience independence will gain a sense of autonomy
  • Children that are overly restrained or punished harshly will develop shame and doubt
  1. Stage 3 (3–5 years) Initiative vs. Guilt 
  • Children are exposed to the wider social world and given greater responsibility
  • Sense of accomplishment leads to initiative, whereas feelings of guilt can emerge if the child is made to feel too anxious or irresponsible
  1. Stage 4 (5–12 years) Industry vs. Inferiority 
  • Stage of life surrounding mastery of knowledge and intellectual skills
  • Sense of competence and achievement leads to industry
  • Feeling incompetent and unproductive leads to inferiority
  1. Stage 5 (adolescence) Identity vs. Confusion
  • Developing a sense of who one is and where one is going in life
  • Successful resolution leads to positive identity
  • Unsuccessful resolution leads to identity confusion or a negative identity
  1. Stage 6 (young adulthood) Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • Time for sharing oneself with another person
  • Capacity to hold commitments with others leads to intimacy
  • Failure to establish commitments leads to feelings of isolation
  1. Stage 7 (middle adulthood) Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • Caring for others in family, friends, and work leads to sense of contribution to later generations
  • Stagnation comes from a sense of boredom and meaninglessness
  1. Stage 8 (late adulthood to death) Integrity vs. Despair 
  • Successful resolutions of all previous crises leads to integrity and the ability to see broad truths and advise those in earlier stages
  • Despair arises from feelings of helplessness and the bitter sense that life has been incomplete.

Download Erikson’s 8 Stages of Psychosocial Development Study Notes PDF

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