With Verified Answers
- or + A03 : bowbly and the critical period - ANSWER-Bowlby says that the
first two and a half years are as the critical period for psychological
development. If a child is separated from their mother in the absence of
suitable substitute care and so deprived of her emotional care for on
extended duration during this critical period then Bowlby believed
psychological damage was inevitable. He also believed there was a
continuing risk up to the age of 5-years-old.
.: A limitation of the research of the influence of early attachments on
later life is. Socially sensitive and deterministic: A03 - ANSWER-A limitation
of the research of the influence of early attachments on later life is that it
is socially sensitive as well as deterministic. Studies suggests that your
early attachment type predicts how you will be as an adult or parent. This
not only raises an issue fer parents of the children, as they may be labelled
as insensitive for 'making' their children resistant but also takes away any
free will a person has to change their attachment type from childhood.
Therefore, the research in this area can have negative implications for all
those involved and should be generalised with caution.
.A03 Meltzoff and Moore study- Feldman - ANSWER-Feldman points out
that ideas like synchrony and reciprocity simply give names to patterns of
,observable behaviours but might not be particularly useful in
understanding child development.
.A03 Meltzoff and Moore study- Practical applications: - ANSWER-Can be
used in parenting skills training. Crotwell found that a 10-minute parent-
child interaction therapy improved parenting
.A03 Meltzoff and Moore study- Reliability and validity - ANSWER-One
strength is that the interactions are filmed in a lab, e.g. Meltzoff and
Moore. This means many EV's can be controlled and as it is recorded it can
be analysed later. Therefore, researchers are less likely to miss behaviours.
This allows inter-rater reliability to be established. Therefore, the data will
have goof reliability and validity.
However, the interactions can be hard to be interpreted. Babies lack co-
ordination so movements being observed are subtle. For e.g. the baby
could be just passing wind or twitching. This means we cannot be certain
that the behaviours seen in caregiver-infant interactions have a special
meaning.
.Ainsworth's Strange situation - - ANSWER-- A technique used to measure
attachment
.Attachment - ANSWER-An emotional, strong and reciprocal bond
between two people, especially and infant and caregiver.
,.Babies do cute things from when they are born- - ANSWER-(social
releases) e.g. smiling, cooing, gripping.
A child is maximally sensitive at 6 months and can be extended up to the
age of 2 years old. This is the sensitive period.
.Bowlby (1944)- A01-Study on 44 thieves Findings- - ANSWER--He found
that the thieves lacked a social conscience. -32% of thieves were
diagnosed as affectionless psychopaths (14/44) -86% of this group had
experienced separation for at least a week before the age of 5. (12/14)
.Brazelton Reciprocity: - ANSWER-described the view that babies have
'Active
movement' as a 'dance'.
.Continuity hypothesis- Bowlby's maternal deprivation hypothesis -
ANSWER-- if there are
prolonged separations then there may
be issues into adulthood.
.Critical period- - ANSWER-time within an attachment must form if it is to
form at all. Bowlby extended the idea to humans. Proposing that human
babies
have a sensitive period after which it will be more difficult to form
attachments.( 6 months - 2 and a half years).
, .Critical period- Bowlby's maternal deprivation hypothesis - ANSWER-an
issue if prolonged
separation, if before two and a half
years (but can rise up to 5 years) and if
no substitution available.
.Cultural variations in attachment
Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg
A01-
Procedure - ANSWER--Completed a meta-analysis (summery piece of
research from a range of similar studies) on 32 studies using Ainsworth's
strange situation.
-They were looking at over 2000 babies to see attachment types both
between and within culture: individualistic: emphasises personal
independence
collectivist: (emphasises family and work goals)
countires invloved: Britian, sweden, netherlands, US , germany, china ,
japan, isreal.
.Cultural variations in attachment
Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg
A01- findings - ANSWER--Secure attachment was the most common in all 8