Schaffer-Emerson stages of attachment

    Cards (9)

    • Stage 1: A social stage
      • infants respond similarly to human objects and non-human object although still respond more to familiar humans
      • reciprocity and IS plays a role
    • stage 2 : Indiscriminate stage
      • infants are more social and prefer human company than inanimate objects and can distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar people
      • don't tend show separation anxiety or stranger anxiety
    • stage 3 : specific attachment stage
      • start to show separation anxiety when particular person leaves
      • start to show signs of stranger anxiety
      • 65% signals of the time it is with the mother
    • stage 4 : multiple attachment
      • develop a wider circle of multiple attachments
      • display separation in theses relationship
      • 29% of babies had multiple attachment within a month of forming a primary one
      • by 1 year had 75% of multiple attachment
    • Schaffer and Emerson Glasgow project:
      • investigate formation of early attachment, in particular the age at which they developed their emotional intensity
      • 60 infants 31 male 21 female 
      • mothers were visited every 4 weeks and then again at 18 months
      • mothers kept a diary
      • 50% showed separation anxiety towards a particular adults between 25-32 weeks and formed a primary attachment
      • 65% usually mother
      • 29% attached to mutiple
      • 75% had an attachment with their fathers as a secondary attachment
    • argued that the study had good external validity
      • Schaffer and emerson study was carried out in the families own homes and done by parent
      • means that babies behaviour was not affected by external people
      • took place largely in every day setting, it could be said to have good external validity
    • however, mothers carried observations by themselves
      • may have reported biased findings eg/ if they were tired, they may have not been so positively receptive to their babies who may then demonstrate anxiety
      • may not have been truthfully recorded
      • therefore even if babies were natural, may not have been recorded accurately
    • evidence may be poor for the asocial stage
      • babies may have poor coordination and are generally pretty much immobile, difficult to make judgements about them based on observation of their behaviour
      • difficult to come to strong conclusions
      • therefore babies may actually be quite social but due to flawed methods in observations of caregivers, they appear to be not social
    • another problem is that the sample was very specific geographically and socially
      • sample size was 60 and large amount of data gathered
      • same part of glassgow and working class familiy 
      • child rearing practices differe from culture to culture and have changed alot since that 1960s
      • eg/ collectivist cultures, multiple attachment form from an earlier age
      • does not generalise well to other social and historical context
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