Schaffer’s Stages of Attachment

Cards (12)

  • Method
    • 60 babies from skilled working class families were observed
    • Mothers and babies were visited once a , month for the first year and then again at 18 months
    • They asked mother questions about how the babies reacted to 7 everyday separations (e.g. Adult leaves the room)- measured separation anxiety
    • Assessed how babies reacted to unfamiliar adults (stranger anxiety)
  • Findings
    • beterrm 25-32 weeks of age, 50% of babies showed separation anxiety towards their mother (specific attachment)
    • This attachment was with the caregiver who was most sensitive to infant signals not necessarily who they spent the most time with
    • By 40 weeks, 80% of babies had a specific attachments and 30% had multiple
  • Asocial Stage - Birth–8 Weeks
    • behaviour between humans and non-human objects is very similar
    • Infants can recognise specific faces
    • Infants are happier with human than when alone, they smile at anyone and prefer familiar individuals and prefer faces to non-faces
  • Indiscriminate Attachment - 2-7 months
    • Recognise and prefer familiar people.
    • Infants smile more at familiar faces than unfamiliar faces.
    • Infants at this stage have prefer people rather than inanimate objects BUT they will accept comfort from any adult as they don’t have stranger anxiety.
  • Specific Attachment - 7-12 months
    • infant shows a distinct protest when a particular person puts them down – separation anxiety
    • They show happiness and joy when that person returns and is comforted by them – Primary Attachment.
    • They will show stranger anxiety.
    • Schaffer and Emerson state that the primary attachment isn't always the person that spends most of the time with the infant.
    • They concluded it’s the quality of the relationship not quantity.
    • In 65% of children the first specific attached was to the mum, 30% mum and an object, 3% the father.
  • Multiple Attachments - 1 year +
    • Main attachment is formed and a wider circle of multiple attachments formed depending on consistent relationships.
    • Schaffer and Emerson found that within one month becoming attached 29%of the infants had multiple attachments, parent, grandparents, siblings etc.,
    • These are secondary attachments.
    • Separation anxiety was displayed in these relationships.
    • Within 6 months this had risen to 78%.
    • By 1 year a majority of infants had developed multiple attachments.
  • Strength- Good External Validity
    • Most observations carried out by parents during normal activities and then reported to researchers
    • if observer’s were present, this may have distracted the babies, made them anxious and potentially changed their natural behaviour.
    • This means that it is highly likely the participants behaved naturally during the observation
    • meaning good external validity
  • Weakness - Good External Validty
    • Data was from mothers reports of their child. Mothers may have been less sensitive therefore not reported it
    • systematic bias – challenges validity.
  • Weakness - Biases Sample
    • All participants from the same district / area
    • Working class population - can’t really be generalised
    • Sample form 1960’s (parenting has changed)
    • Now more women work, higher care outside the home now AND now more fathers stay at home to care for the family than every before (quadrupled since 1960)
  • Real world application
    • Day care
    • In the early stages (asocial and indiscriminate) babies can be comforted by any skilled adult
    • but if a child starts day care during the stage of specific attachments, care from an unfamiliar adult may cause distress and longer-term problems
    • This means that Schaffer and Emerson’s stages can help parents making day care decisions
  • Cultural Evaluation (weaknesses) 

    • Sagi (1994) compared sleeping arrangements in communal environments and family-based sleeping arrangements (where mother closeness was twice as common).
    • This suggests that the stage model (Schaffer and Emerson) applies to individualist cultures only.
  • Collectivist and Individualistic cultures
    • Individualistic culture – western cultures, value independence and individuality. i.e. UK and USA
    • Collectivist culture – importance of the group.
    • Characterised by the extent to which things are shared, groups live together, share tasks, belongings and childrearing.
    • Collectivist cultures value interdependence –dependent on one another, multiple attachments are common. I.e. Japan and China