Schaffer's stages of attachment

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    • Stage 1- Asocial stage:
      • Behaviour towards humans and innate objects fairly similar.
      • However, Schaffer and Emerson- thought even at this stage babies tend to show preference to be with other people.
      • Preference for company of familiar people and more easily comforted by them.
    • Stage 2- Indiscriminate attachment:
      • 2-7 months- more obvious and observable behaviours.
      • Clear preference for being with other people rather than innate objects.
      • Recognise and prefer familiar people.
      • However- usually accept cuddles and comfortable from any person
      • No separation anxiety and stranger anxiety.
    • Stage 3 - specific attachment:
      • 7 months- attachment to one specific person.
      • Anxiety towards strangers and anxiety when separated from attachment figure.
      • Primary attachment figure- person who offers most interaction and responds to the baby's signals with the most skill (mother in 65% of cases)
    • Stage 4- Multiple attachment:
      • Multiple attachments with other people.
      • Secondary attachments.
      • Schaffer and Emerson- 29% formed secondary attachments 1 month after Primary attachment.
    • Schaffer and Emerson:
      • 60 babies- 31 boys and 29 girls all from Glasgow and working class families.
      • Visited babies in own homes every month for first year and again at 18 months.
      • Researchers asked mother's questions about the kind of protest their babies showed in seven everyday separations.
      • Designes to measure babies attachment.
      • Findings- identified 4 distinct stages in development of infant attachment behaviour.
    • Strength:
      • Good external validity.
      • Most observations made by parents during activities and reported to researchers.
      • Alternative would have been researchers present to record behaviour- might have distracted babies.
      • Means highly likely that ppts behaved naturally while being observed.
    • Counterpoint to good external validity:
      • Mother's bias- unlikely to be objective observers.
      • May not have noticed signs of anxiety or may have misremembered it.
      • Means even if babies behaved naturally their behaviour may not been accurately recored.
    • Limitation:
      • Schaffer's and Emerson's stages- validity of the measures used to assess attachment in the asocial stage.
      • Young babies have poor co-ordination and are farily immobile.
      • Subtle and hard to observe- means difficult for Mother's to observe and report back to researchers on signs of anxiety and attachment in this age group.
      • Means babies may actually be quite social but due to flawed methods, may seem asocial.
    • Strength:
      • S and E's stage have practical application in day care.
      • In the asocial and indiscriminate stages day care is likely to be straightforward as babies can be comforted by any skilled adult.
      • However, S and E's research tells us that day care, especially starting day care with an unfamiliar adult, may be problematic during the specific attachment stage.
      • Means that parents' use of day Car can be planned using S and E's stages.
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