FRHD 2270 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Child Abuse, John Bowlby
SEPT 28
Why Attachment
• Foundation of all relationships
• Impacts all aspects of development
• The beginning of parenting
History of Attachment
• Freud
o First to focus on mother-infant relationships
• Hull
o Drive reduction theory
o Reduced to basic physical needs
▪ Hunger, constant conflict
History of Bowlby
• Parents believed too much parental affection and attention would spoil the child
• Parents spent minimal time
• Sent to boarding school at 7
• University: spent time with delinquent children
• World Health organization commissioned Bowlby to write report on metal health of homeless
children
o The infant and young child should experience a warm, intimate, and continuous
relationship with his mother in which both find satisfaction and enjoyment
Behaviour Ecology Theory – Bowlby
• Universal
• Social interaction, communication > feeling, physical contact
• Innate mutual responsiveness and attraction between parents and infants
• Ifats’ aishess eliits potetie esposes fo adults
• Baies’ ig, sukig, silig, lookig at caregiver preferentially, have no effect of orienting
caregiver
Ainsworth
• All infants are attached but differ in sense of security
• Vie othe as seue ase
• First relationship serves as the foundation for all others
o Internal working model
• Ease of comfortig ifat’s distess i the ualit of attahet
• Observing distress
Experiment: The Strange Situation
• Parent and infant brought into room by research assistant
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Document Summary
Why attachment: foundation of all relationships, the beginning of parenting. History of attachment: freud, first to focus on mother-infant relationships, hull, drive reduction theory, reduced to basic physical needs, hunger, constant conflict. Behaviour ecology theory bowlby: universal, social interaction, communication > feeling, physical contact, ba(cid:271)ies" (cid:272)(cid:396)(cid:455)i(cid:374)g, su(cid:272)ki(cid:374)g, s(cid:373)ili(cid:374)g, looki(cid:374)g at caregiver preferentially, have no effect of orienting. Innate mutual responsiveness and attraction between parents and infants. I(cid:374)fa(cid:374)ts" (cid:271)a(cid:271)(cid:455)ish(cid:374)ess eli(cid:272)its p(cid:396)ote(cid:272)ti(cid:448)e (cid:396)espo(cid:374)ses f(cid:396)o(cid:373) adults caregiver. Ainsworth: all infants are attached but differ in sense of security, vie(cid:449) (cid:373)othe(cid:396) as (cid:862)se(cid:272)u(cid:396)e (cid:271)ase(cid:863, first relationship serves as the foundation for all others. Internal working model: ease of comforti(cid:374)g i(cid:374)fa(cid:374)t"s dist(cid:396)ess i(cid:374) the (cid:395)ualit(cid:455) of atta(cid:272)h(cid:373)e(cid:374)t, observing distress. Experiment: the strange situation: parent and infant brought into room by research assistant. Infant seeks comfort from caregiver during reunion: once comforted, will return and play, show interest in objects and in stranger, get acquainted with unfamiliar settings, use caregiver as secure base then to explore.