Final answer:
Freud's theory of psychosexual development consists of five stages: oral, expulsion , phallic, latency, and reproductive, with latency coming after the phallic stage and before the reproductive stage (option 4).
Step-by-step explanation:
Sigmund Freud proposed the theory of psychosexual development, where he outlined a sequence of stages that a person passes through from early childhood into adulthood. This theory suggests that personality formation is closely linked to early childhood experiences centers around specific erogenous zones at different stages. These stages are: oral, expulsion, phallic, latency, and reproduction.
The correct sequence according to Freud is that after the phallic stage, a child enters into the latency stage. Therefore, the answer to the student's question about the order of stages in Freud's theory of development is that: Freud suggested that in the process of development, people pass through a reproductive stage before they enter a phallic stage is not correct; an individual actually experiences: 4) a latency stage before they enter a genital stage.