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Bright Beginningss#6
Understanding
Attachment in
Young Children
FS-617, OCTOBER 2005 Sean Brotherson, Family Science Specialist,
NDSU Extension Service
Why do babies cry when
their mother leaves the room? Why do young children
seek out a parent for a hug when they get hurt? Why do
infants want so insistently to be fed on a regular schedule?
These and other questions relate to the key
interactions that build a relationship between adults and
young children - the attachment
relationship.
Understanding Attachment
The quality of the relationship between parents and
young children is one of the most
powerful factors in a child's growth and development.
Understanding this relationship has changed our understanding
of what is important in parenting young children. The
term
attachment often is used to
describe the nature of this
relationship.
Terms such as "attachment" and "bonding" often are used
interchangeably. However, the meanings can be quite different.
Attachment is the word used to refer to the relationship
developed between an infant and a parent
or primary caregiver during the first two to three years of life.
How this relationship forms
is dependent on how a parent responds to a child's needs
for care, comfort and security.
It develops gradually and goes through a variety of phases.
Note that this attachment refers
to a child's feelings and actions
in the relationship and not to the parent's feelings about the child.
Bonding often is the word used to refer to a parent's tie to an
infant and typically occurs in the first hours and days of a child's
life. Strong feelings of love and care that a mother or father
feels toward a child help cement this bond. The "bonding
experience" can help some parents develop
a more permanent bond with
their young children, although children need continuing care
and sensitivity to form strong attachments.
Types of Attachment Relationships
The attachment relationship that
a young child forms during the first two years of life takes time
to develop. Typically, infants will develop this relationship with
the parent(s) or person who provides the most direct, responsive care
to their needs. This type of
attachment with one to two significant adults is
the
primary attachment relationship.
Then children will form supporting relationships with other
caring adults, which fall into the category of secondary attachment
relationships. Ideally, a child
will be able to form one to two strong and positive
attachment relationships with parents, and then have a supportive web
of secondary attachments with siblings, aunts and uncles,
grandparents, close friends, caregivers, etc. This is the
most positive environment for a
young child.
Attachment styles
Scientific research on parent-child relationships suggests that
two primary types of attachments form: secure attachments
and insecure attachments. Remember that this refers to a child's
quality of connection to an adult caregiver, not the parent's feelings about
the child. The following characteristics highlight each attachment type:
Secure attachment - Characterized by children who
respond happily to interaction or reunion with parents, greet
parents actively, explore the environment around them while knowing where the parents are, seek contact with parents
when distressed and exhibit trust in their parents' responses to them.
Insecure attachment-resistant/ambivalent -
Characterized by children
who become anxious and seek parents but then struggle to
get away, are reluctant to explore the environment, become
upset easily and exhibit frustration with their parents' responses to them.
Insecure attachment - avoidant - Characterized by children who avoid or ignore
a parent's presence, show little response when parents are
close by, display few strong emotional outbursts, and may avoid
or ignore a parent's responses toward them.
Insecure attachment - disorganized - Characterized by children who are not
predictable in their behavior, seem unable
to cope easily or be comforted when stressed, and show
evidence of fear or confusion around a caregiver.
About 55 percent to 65 percent
of children tend to fall into the "secure" attachment
category, while about 10 percent to
15 percent tend to show an
"insecure-resistant/ambivalent" pattern, 20 percent to 25
percent show an "insecure-avoidant" pattern and 15 percent to
20 percent show an "insecure-
disorganized" pattern.
What do these patterns mean?
In general, these patterns or types of attachment suggest the
quality of the relationship a child feels toward a particular person
(parent, grandparent, caregiver, etc.). They represent children's
felt sense of security and comfort level with the person's
responsiveness to their needs. They are important because children often
show different outcomes in their
well-being based on attachment style. Some of the
important aspects of a child's growth affected by attachment quality include
the following:
Children who are secure in their attachments more freely
explore their environment and are able to learn with confidence,
while children who are insecure are more likely to struggle in
being confident and learning about their surroundings.
Children who are secure tend
to be more popular with peers and exhibit more positive
social interaction with other kids, while children who are
insecure seem more at risk for hostile, anti-social or difficult
relationships with other children.
Children who are secure tend to be more emotionally stable
and able to express and manage their feelings well, while
children who are insecure are more likely to be emotionally unstable
and have difficulty in expressing
and managing feelings.
Children who are secure
demonstrate greater ability
to handle stress and help others handle stress, while
children who are insecure are more
likely to struggle when stressed, act out in unhealthy ways
and be insensitive to others who
are stressed.
The importance of attachment quality can be significant. How
do such attachments develop?
Development of
attachment styles
Several key factors can affect the quality of a child's
attachment. These can include the child's temperament (more active
and outgoing, etc.), the context of
the situation (stranger present, familiar room, etc.), early
history (traumatic experience, etc.) and other things. But
the way in which a parent responds to and
interacts with a young child is the key factor in how an
attachment develops.
A child's attachment style
generally develops based on
the child's perception or
understanding of the caregiver's reliability in providing
comfort, support and security. Behaviors that promote attachment
and provide the opportunity for meaningful interaction include:
Smiling
Looking at each other
Vocalizing to each other
Following
Clinging
Physical touch and hugging
Exploring the surroundings
Feeding interactions
Crying
Playing
Attachment Quiz - True or False?
Scientists who study parent-child interactions have learned
much about what builds a strong attachment relationship. Answer to
yourself whether the following statements are True
or False.
1. Young children bond easily with a wide variety of caregivers
in the first two years of life.
2. The type of attachment relationship a parent forms with a
young child has little effect on how the child's brain forms.
3. Infants in the first six months who cry for food or comfort
should not be picked up every time because they'll be "spoiled."
4. Young children really enjoy interaction but parents need to
be careful not to "overstimulate" them.
5. Young children who have not formed healthy attachments
often can overcome this challenge through intensive and caring attention.
The answer to the first three statements is
FALSE;
the answer to the last two statements is
TRUE.
From research we know that:
1. Young children normally form strong attachments with one or
two primary caregivers during the first two years of life,
rather than many people.
2. The type of attachment relationship a child forms actually
helps shape trillions of connections related to language, thinking,
motor control and emotions in a baby's brain.
3. During the first six months of a child's life, children respond best
to immediate and consistent attention and comfort and cannot
be "spoiled" by it.
4. Children need a stimulating environment, but overstimulation
can be stressful and have negative side effects on children at times.
5. Many programs exist to help children form strong, secure
attachments if this has been lacking in their early development.
Parents and other caregivers should seek
to understand the
importance of
healthy attachments
with young children
and work toward
the formation of strong, secure attachments
with children.
My Child's Attachments: A Personal Assessment
What do you think about the quality of your child's attachments to you and others?
With whom are those attachments? Might they be improved?
Use this exercise as a personal assessment to consider your own child's attachment relationships.
Section 1. Attachments to Whom?
Fill in the names of the people (you or others)
with whom you feel your child has a primary (main)
attachment relationship. Then fill in those you
identify as important secondary (supportive)
attachment relationships for your child. This represents
your child's "attachment web" of support for growth
and development.
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Primary ____________________
____________________
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Primary ____________________
____________________
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secondary
____________________
____________________
____________________
____________________
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secondary
____________________
____________________
____________________
____________________
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Section 2.
Type of Attachment
Think of attachment quality as occurring on a
continuum from insecure to secure. Place yourself
and your child somewhere on this continuum based
on what you understand about attachment types.
Insecure-Resistant/Ambivalent
______________________
______________________Secure
______________________
Insecure-Avoidant or Disorganized
This is not a scientific evaluation; it is merely a
tool to help you think about your own parent-child
relationships. Attachment quality may be different
for your relationships with different children.
Additional examples that you may use are below.
Relationship 1 - ______________________
Insecure-Resistant/Ambivalent
______________________
______________________Secure
______________________
Insecure-Avoidant or Disorganized
Relationship 2 - _________________________
Insecure-Resistant/Ambivalent
______________________
______________________Secure
______________________
Insecure-Avoidant or Disorganized
Relationship 3 - _________________________
Insecure-Resistant/Ambivalent
______________________
______________________Secure
______________________
Insecure-Avoidant or Disorganized
References
Ainsworth, M.D.S. (1973).
The development of infant-mother attachment. In B. Caldwell and
H. Ricciuti (Eds.), Review of Child Development
Research (Vol. 3). Chicago, Ill.: University of
Chicago Press.
Bowlby, J. (1982). Attachment and loss: Vol. 1.
Attachment (2nd ed.).
New York: Basic Books.
Brazelton, T.B. (1992). Touchpoints: Your Child's Emotional and
Behavioral Development. Reading, Mass.: Perseus Books.
Bretherton, I. and Waters, E. (1985). Growing Points of Attachment
Theory and Research. Monographs
of the Society for Research in
Child Development, 50 (1-2,
Serial No. 209).
Gearity, A. (1996). Attachment theory and real life: How to make
ideas work. Early Report, Spring 1996. Minneapolis, Minn.: Center
for Early Education and Development, University of Minnesota.
Goldberg, S. (2000). Attachment
and Development. Hillsdale, N.J.: The Analytic Press.
Marchel, M.A. (1996). Attachment theory: Parent-child
relationships revisited. Early Report, Spring
1996. Minneapolis, Minn.: Center for Early Education and
Development, University of Minnesota.
Sroufe, L.A. (1985). Attachment classification from the
perspective of infant-caregiver relationships and infant temperament.
Child Development, 56, 317-325.
Waters, E., Hamilton, C.E. and Weinfield, N.S. (2000). The
stability of attachment security from infancy to adolescence and
early adulthood: General introduction. Child Development,
71(3),678-683.
For more information on this and other topics, see:
www.ag.ndsu.edu
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