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Attachment - PowerPoint Presentation

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Attachment - PPT Presentation

Bowlby Bowlby was influenced by Freud and Lorenz imprinting He believed that attachment is innate and adaptive We are all born with a need to form attachments In line with Darwins theory on natural selection ID: 373200

attachment bowlby mother child bowlby attachment child mother deprivation children attachments form social relationship early privation relationships believed behaviour

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Attachment

BowlbySlide2

Bowlby

was influenced by Freud and Lorenz ( imprinting)

He believed that attachment is innate and adaptive

We are all born with a need to form attachmentsSlide3

In line with

Darwins theory on natural selection

any behaviour that helps you survive to maturity and reproduce yourself will be maintained in the gene pool.  In human terms, the

newborn

infant is helpless and relies on its mother for food, warmth etc.  Similarly the mother inherits a genetic blueprint that predisposes her to loving behaviour towards the infant.Slide4

Bowlby

believes that attachment promotes survival in 3 ways:

Safety: the attachment keeps mother and child close to each other.  Separation results in feelings of anxiety.

Safe base for exploration: the child is happy to wander and explore (necessary for its cognitive development) knowing it has a safe place to return to if things turn nasty.  This also develops independence necessary in later life. 

Internal working model: This was based on Freud’s idea of the mother-child relationship acting as a prototype fro all future attachments. 

Bowlby

believed that this first relationship forms a template or schema that gives the child a feel for what a relationship is.Slide5

Other aspects

Sensitive period:

Bowlby

believed that there was a period in development where a child is more likely to develop an attachment (4-6

th

month)

Irreversible: The attachment can’t be broken once made

Social Releasers:

the child has built in mechanisms for encouraging care-giving behaviour from parents.  Children have ‘baby faces’ and their noises and facial expressions such as smiles encourage contact.Slide6

Babies’ smiles are powerful things leaving

mothers spellbound and enslaved.  Who can doubt that the baby who most readily

rewards his mother with a smile is the one

who is best loved and best cared for?’

 

                                  

Bowlby

1957. 

Social ReleasersSlide7

Continuity Hypothesis

The internal working model ensures that early attachments are reflected in later relationship types.  For example, a secure attachment as a child leads to greater emotional and social stability as an adult, whereas an insecure attachment is likely to lead to difficulties with later relationships.Slide8

Monotropy

There has been a debate about whether or not children create one or more attachments

Bowlby

didn’t actually believe that only 1 attachment was formed

What he did believe was that there was only one primary attachment which didn’t necessarily mean the motherSlide9

Monotropy

cont

Other theorists claimed that a child will benefit from having more than one attachment

An example would a child's attachment with his/her Father

In Caribbean and European culture, infants seem to form many equally important attachments to different people.Slide10

Monotropy

Bowlby (1969) claimed that there was a hierarchy of attachments, with a primary caregiver, usually the mother at the top.  The

Efe

, an African tribe, share the care of their children so that women in the village breast feed each another’s children.  However, the infants still go on to form their primary attachment with their biological mother.Slide11

Evaluation

Bowlby

appears to focus to much on the Mother and not enough on the Father

Additonally

Bowlby

seemed to overlook the relationships the child develops with its brothers and sisters.  Schaffer (1996) describes these as horizontal relationships as opposed to the vertical relationships with parents, teachers and other adultsSlide12

Maternal Deprivation

Breaking of bonds in early life leads to intellectual, social and emotional problems in later life.  Note, by ‘maternal’ it is usually assumed that

Bowlby

meant mother figure. 

Bowlby

originally believed the effects to be permanent and irreversibleSlide13

Evaluation of the Maternal Deprivation hypothesis

Later studies have shown that many of the effects of early deprivation can be overcome.  They are not so permanent and irreversible as

Bowlby

seemed to

assume

Children reared in institutions

were

not only separated from parents they were also kept in relatively poor conditions.  This is likely to have added to the effectsSlide14

Deprivation and Privation

Deprivation: where an attachment can be broken temporarily (through hospitalisation) or through death

Privation: Where a child has been treated so badly that they have never been able to form an attachmentSlide15

Bowlby

did not distinguish between the two

Recent studies however suggest:

1.       Deprivation and privation are distinct, believing that the long term consequences of privation are far more severe than the long term consequences of deprivation.

2.       Children are generally far more resilient to early separation than

Bowlby

originally proposed. 

Bowlby

himself later changed his views adopting this line.Slide16

Any questions

Thank You