Attachment Theory Essay

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    This theory fundamentally sees the earliest bonds formed between children and their caregivers as a key factor in human growth and development, having an immense impact on progression and continuing throughout life. So as a human being to some extent we may need comfort and attachment. As we are highly social species we carries the meaning of tenderness, closeness, the soothing of pain and sorrow, the calming of anxiety, the feeling of security which comes from being close to another. This…

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    Significance Attachment theory, first formulated by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth is one of the leading frameworks in developmental psychology. Originally there was three attachment classifications, secure, avoidant, and ambivalent (Ainsworth, Blehar, Waters, & Wall, 1978). Securely attached infants are distressed when a parent leaves yet soothed and happy when they return Avoidant infants do not show a preference for the mother and are not excited when she returns. Ambivalent infants do not…

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    Adult Attachment Theory

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    According to adult attachment theory, if people feel safe and cared for, they will carry forward into their adult relationships a secure attachment style in which they feel confident about themselves and confident that others will treat them well (Whitbourne,2014). When babies are born they develop a secure attachment to their care giver. Usually that caregiver is the mother. This secure bond becomes the foundation for a healthy development for a child. What is important that the book states is…

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    most commonly known attachment theories was proposed by Bowlby in the late 1960s (Berk, 2012, p. 428). Bowlby collaborated with many in order to research the development of attachment between a child and caregiver from birth on (Newman & Newman, 2015, p. 161). Since then, theorists have agreed that the forming of attachment and its patterns occurs in stages beginning at one’s birth and continuing throughout childhood (Newman & Newman, 2015, p. 162). These specifics of attachment development…

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    Treatment Goals Treatment goals to be used are based on the Attachment theory. The purpose of the treatment is to assist Ben and Katie to construct a secure base. The first step in the therapy process is to work on the triangulation relationship they have with their children. It is important to create appropriate boundaries (not too enmeshed or not too rigid). Besides, another area that is needed to be worked is the hierarchy for each family member. During the second phase of treatment, Ben…

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    The Attachment Theory of childhood development was pioneered by John Bowlby in the early 1900's. His theory indicated a child would develop a critical emotional attachment to a primary caregiver, often times the mother, as an evolutionary response to the need for survival since they were unable to care for themselves. If the caregiver was present to make the child feel secure because of the need for attachment, the child would be measurably more likely (dependent upon severity of environmental…

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    138). IV. Based on the definition of “attachment” in the book “Understanding Human Behavior and the Social Environment,” children form close bonds with a relative. So in order for a social worker to have an effective professional relationship with a child, him or her would have to apply engagement skills to gain their trust. Remember, the child sees the social worker as a “stranger” and someone who might be out to inflict hurt. V. Consequently, “attachment theory” is seen as a developing…

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    Atachemnt theory is also intergrated with behavioral theory and cognitive theory for the purpose of understanding childhood experiences. Attachment theory is also congruence with ethological theory. Both of them have the assumption that innate behavioral tendencies ensure attachment and attachment ensures survival of infants. Empirical status Although attachment theory may be included in a psychodynamic and psychoanalytic framework, unlike psychodynamics or psychoanalytic which are hard to…

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    The attachment theory is well known to those in the field of psychology and child development. It was presented in the mid-to-late nineteen fifties by the world renown psychoanalyst John Bowlby, and later expanded upon with the help of psychologist Mary Ainsworth. The theory was considered revolutionary due to its shift in the focus of human development from intrapersonal conflicts to interpersonal relations to explain psychosocial health and behaviors. Bowlby focused most of his theory on the…

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    Section One: Affective aspects of development The attachment theory is a significant affective developmental theory that describes the dynamics of long-term interpersonal relationships. Attachment is a deep and emotional bond that connects one person to another (Ainsworth, 1973, Bowlby, 1969, as cited in McLeod, 2009). The most important principle of the attachment theory has been described by psychiatrist John Bowlby (1951, as cited in Claiborne & Drewery, 2014) in that an infant needs to…

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