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Does the attachment theory provide a sound
basis for advice on how to bring up children? To answer this question for
advice to parents I will explore some of the details of the attachment theory
showing, 1) earlier studies and more up to date criticisms, 2) how it proposes
family members and day care can affect a child’s upbringing.
Attachment is the bond that develops between caregiver and infant when it is
about eight or nine months old, providing the child with emotional security.
Meshing commences from when the child is being fed, onto taking part in
pseudo-dialogue and then following on to the child taking part in a more active
role of proto dialogue, illustrated by Kaye (1982), other concepts such as
scaffolding and inter-subjectivity have also been explored by psychologists. As
the infant grows older the attention escalates towards the direction of the
caregiver.
John Bowlby(1958, 1969, 1973, 1980) pioneer of the attachment theory was
involved in research regarding the emotional connection between the adult and
infant and he believed that the early relationships determined the behaviour
and emotional development of a child. In an early Bowlby (1944) study he
discovered children who had an unsettling upbringing where more likely to
become juvenile delinquents. His work is constantly open to criticism and has
been revisited with further research. Subsequent research has based measuring
security and insecurity in a child from an early age using the Strange
Situation Test. Other research has shown certain trends of difficult behaviour
and how the child interacts with the caregiver actively.
Bowlby’s theory was based on ideas from ethology and previous work,
psychodynamic theory by Sigmund Freud, it was appropriate for the 1950’s after
the 2nd World War when women were returning to household duties and motherhood
as men returned to their employment after the war. He believed that a child
should have interaction with one caregiver ‘monotropism’ and that separation
from this person would trigger the ‘proximity promoting behaviours’ in the
attachment structure.
The caregiver arriving would cause the behaviours of, clinging, making noises
and crying to discontinue. The protected foundations of the affectionate bonds
occurring between parent and infant representation becomes part of the internal
working model. Those become the foundations and the heart of all close
relationships during the continuing life of the child through to adulthood. The
disruption of the relationship between mother and child through parting, lack
of emotion and bereavement to the bonding process.
Bowlby’s maternal deprivation theory (1951,1953)was enthused by the Konrad
Lorenz’s(1966 ) imprinting study on young animals. He believed that like
imprininting one permanent figure should be the caregiver and children deprived
of those maternal links could be disastrous to the child’s mental health and
could lead
to delinquency. His views on long term institutional care were that if a child
was fostered before the age of 2yrs and six months it may not be delayed in
emotional, social and cognitive development but some of his studies show that
there have been various forms of parting in youths with severe behavioural
problems
Attachment behaviour according to Mary Ainsworth (1985; Ainsworth and Bell,
1974; Ainsworth et al., 1978) forms the groundings for all potential
associations and this develops up to two years after the child is born. She
also harmonized with Bowlby on the view that the attachment bonding occurred
within the age of two years old. Approximately when the child is seven months
old they become wary of strangers and unknown surroundings. This continue until
the child is about two years old. The procedure Ainsworth (1969) investigated
to measure if a child was securely or insecurely attached was the ‘strange
situation paradigm’. This entailed a sequence of short partings and reunions.
The child’s parent and a stranger took part in the study with a one year old
child, there were eight sequences in all and Ainsworth’s measurement on secure
and insecure attachment was based on the reunion episode of how the child
reacted in this situation.This was judged using four different variables. It
was found that there were three diverse distinct patterns of adjustment. Type
A: anxious/ avoidant, type B: secure and type C: anxious/ ambivalent. Most of
the children displayed secure attachment, one fifth of the sample showed type A
and one tenth showed type C. Main and Solomon (1990) have introduced a further
pattern type D: disorganized in a more recent study to relate to behaviour for
a child in a high risk environment. The ‘strange situation paradigm’, has been
critized by Judy Dunn (1982, 1983), as she believes that children from
different backgrounds, e.g. institutional care and living with their own
families may apply different meanings to the test and environment of the child.
The technique and the results of the experiment also are doubted by her.
Another study by Richman (1982) et al has shown that various risk factors of
disturbed behaviour can be determined from when a child is 3 years old. Some of
the factors that can influence a child’s emotional development are a mother’s
mental state, marital relationships and the attitudes of the parents towards
the child. The active role of the child must also be taken into consideration
when assessing advice on how to bring up children as displayed in the
transactional model, Sameroff (1991), as the child is interacting with their
surroundings, while the caregiver is developing the child’s behaviour and
future relationships.
The view of Ainsworth and Bowlby both agreeing that attachment is universal
could be argued as different cultures have varying degrees of how long a child
should be left alone, as the Japanese, Israeli and Chinese results show for
type C, in the cross-cultural study by Marinus van Ijzendoorn and Peter
Kroonenberg (1988). There also could be possible problems with the ethological
view of comparing children to young animals as they could be driven by a food
instinct. Bowlby only considered the effect of the child by the caregiver;
other variables could be brought into affect such as the infant’s temperament.
A mother who gives birth to a child with a thorny temperament could opt to go
to work and leave the child in day care; this could also have the opposite
affect on the mother not being able to leave the child with any
others. The toleration of the mother and the view of the goodness of fit, Chess
and Thomas (1984) could have an impact on behaviour and a reflection on the
attachment bonding of the mother and child. Bowbly and Ainsworth were also
united in the development of secure attachment depending on the sensitive
mothering of the child in the first year but this could also have an impact on
the mother as Woollett and Pheonix (1991) argue, if she has to give up all her
previous engagements and work possibly causing depression. A possible
alternative to this could be to share the responsibility of parenthood but this
would be in contrast to Bowlby and Ainsworth’s view.
The observation of a film called ‘A Two-Year-Old Goes to Hospital’, James
Robertson (1952), brought to the forefront the distress and discomfort of a
child being separated from her mother in hospital during a long term stay. At
this period in time mothers were not encouraged to visit their children in
hospital frequently. The separation of the child according to Ainsworth and
Bowlby could have greatly affected its emotional wellbeing and the bonding of
the attachment process. Separation and the child being looked after by
alternative means have also been studied in more recent research. Day care was
one subject approached by Bowlby and he believed that if a child went to
nursery before three year old it would also lead to irretrievable damage. More
recent studies conducted during the 1970’s and 80’s show contrasting views and
this was confirmed in a study by Jan Belsky and Laurence Steinberg (1978) and
also Clarke-Stewart and Fein (1983). A later study by Belsky (1988), had
different findings as mothers who worked more than 20 hours a week showed an
increasing level of insecure attachment compared to his previous study that
rated no problems with day care, Clarke-Stewart would dispute this data. Some
of the other factors that needed to be taken into account according to Belsky
were the variations of the surroundings, staff, children and quality of day
care.
Bowlby’ s maternal deprivation approach has been greatly critized as nowadays
it is not unknown for other members of the family to loo after the child
successfully. The grandparents if living close by may be a constant form of
childminder as they are continuous figures and this was demonstrated in Judy
Dunn and Kendrick’s Cambridge study. On a wider context the role they determine
is dependant on a number of factors, age, fitness and where they live. It can
also help to improve family finances enabling the mother to go to work.
Although fathers do not generally have a leading role in child rearing
Lamb(1981), this could be seen as the male and female differences in our
cultures. The relationship changes over time between the father and infant,
when the child is a baby he reacts in similar ways to a baby but becomes more
playful as the child ages.
The reaction to a sibling in a family could be different comparing cultures and
Dunn and Kendrick’s study show how the birth of a second child can influence
the behaviour and emotions of the older child. Attachment may not be immediate
for the children and this can be measured using the ‘strange situation test’.
Research using this method by Stewart (1983) agreed with Dunn and Kendrick
showing this attachment could take time to develop.
So does the attachment theory provide a sound basis for advice on how to bring
up children? The early attachment theory is still recognised but it
has been advanced and explored further, the maternal deprivation theory has
become old fashioned and this has been replaced by showing that children can
develop securely with more than one caregiver. Family members can also
act as a caregiver supplying a secure base for future relationships. As more
recent research has shown that there are certain risk factors that can
extinguish difficult behaviours and some of these can be determined from when
the child is three years old, but Sameroff shows that it is not just the
caregiver that should be looked upon for the child’s upbringing as the child
plays an active role in their environment. The attachment theory and the up to
date research could give some advice to parents in how they rear their child as
a working mum may be worried on the effects of a child going to grandparents,
day care or may be looked after by siblings or their fathers. From Dunn’s
research it could also help to show parents not to worry that the bonding of
siblings if not immediate this may not have lasting consequences. The question
of day care would be advisable by Clarke-Stewart but Belsky would not advise
the mother to work more than 20 hours a week in the child’s first week of life.
Grandparents depending on the distance involved would be classed as an
alternative option and a secure basis for child rearing. So from looking at the
attachment theory advising a parent on how to bring up their child the risk
factors would also need to be taken into consideration. The earliest attachment
research by Bowlby on juvenile delinquents could be compared to the study by
Richman in showing how risk factors can provoke such behaviour and not just the
mother’s influence could produce problems.
The problem with the studies involved are that there are always criticism or
alternative views, so depending on which psychologists child rearing is based
on it would be up to the parent to decide. Statistics are always challenged and
the samples of participants are always up to dispute. Future research may lead
to a common approach or agreement on how children can be brought up but in most
cases it is up to the parent. If there are no parents involved then it is up to
child care. Hopefully we have learned from the distressing scenes of the two
year old and her stay in hospital as parents are now allowed to stay with their
children and not have limited visits.
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