Cards (13)

    • What are the 4 elements of Bowlby's theory?
      Monotropy, critical period, social releasers, internal working model
    • What is monotropy?

      Emphasis on a child's attachment to one particular caregiver. Bowlby believed that this attachment is different and unique and more important than others
    • According to monotropy, the more time spent with the primary attachment figure the better
    • What are the two principles linked to monotropy?
      The law of continuity and the law of accumulated separation
    • What does the law of continuity state?

      The more constant and predictable a child's care, the better the quality of their attachment
    • What does the law of accumulated separation state?

      The effects of every separation from the mother add up and the safest dose (of separation)is therefore zero
    • What are social releasers?
      The innate set of 'cute' behaviours possessed by babies that activate the adult attachment system
    • Bowlby recognised that attachment was a reciprocal process. Both the mother and the baby have an innate predisposition to become attached and social releasers trigger that response in caregivers
    • What is the critical period in humans?

      2.5 years
    • What is the sensitive period that was later proposed?

      5 years
    • What does the internal working model suggest?
      The relationship with the primary caregiver serves as a model of what relationships are like. It therefore has a powerful effect on the nature of the child's future relationships
    • Example of internal working mode
      A child whose first experience is of a loving relationship with a reliable caregiver will tend to form an expectation that all relationships are as loving and reliable. They will bring these qualities to future relationships (and vice versa)
    • Most importantly , the internal working model affects the child's later ability to be a parent themselves