"Bowlby and winnicott" Essays and Research Papers

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    Tma 03 Why are people’s life stories important while receiving care and what do workers need to be aware of in encouraging people to talk about their past lives? Introduction In this assignment I am going to explain why life stories of people receiving care are important and how it is essential in developing their sense of identity. I will explain how a sense of identity is developed and what support is available for a child in the looked after system who have no sense of who they

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    teaches infants that they can depend on their parent. John Bowlby studied secure attachments between a child and their parent. He believes that emotional balance as an adult had a direct correlation to the early stages of child development and the maternal relationship. He believed that the relationship should stem from a monotrophy maternal figure or substitutes loving‚ caring and consistent relations with the child (shriner & shriner‚ 2014) Bowlby states that children who do not form a secure relationship

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    Naturalistic Observation

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    "A child’s future relationships are almost entirely determined by the quality of attachment to the mother." Discuss‚ referring to relevant empirical evidence. The primal importance of a child’s bond to its mother has always been recognised‚ and is a topic that has fascinated people for thousands of years. Playwrights from Sophocles to the modern day have explored this‚ and in more recent times psychologists have devoted much research and conjecture to understanding it. Among psychologists‚ there

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    discuss the symptoms of four types of psychological disorders (1.1) identify and evaluate key research in the study of these psychological disorders (2.1) Atypical Disorders - Psychological Disorders Within this essay i will be looking into four different types of psychological disorders and i will be looking into the credible research around each‚ exploring the different views that esteemed psychologists have expressed towards phobic disorder within anxiety disorders‚ mood disorders and obssessive

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    Child Care Level 3

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    Unit 8 E1/A I have collated evidence which describes the role of the practitioner in meeting the children’s care needs. The evidence can be found in my appendix. The evidence I have collate includes the information on compliance with legal requirements ‚ meeting needs and supporting rights of the children‚ working in a team with other professional’s‚ working with families‚ training and development‚ inclusive practice/ attitudes and values‚ positive environment and care of themselves( the practitioner)

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    (internal factors) or nurture (external factors). One of the theories called upon to explore this is attachment theory which was first introduced by John Bowlby (1907-1990). A British psychoanalyst who was intrigued by the bonds between parent and child and the high levels of distressed he witnessed by the child during separation from the parent. Bowlby believed the distress behaviours shown by the child such as “crying and searching are adaptive responses to separation…from the primary attachment figure”

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    Cypc 31.2 task2 Explain how children and young people’s development is influenced by a range of personal and external factors. 2.1 And 2.2 Personal Factors * During pregnancy-: If the mother smokes ‚takes drugs‚ becomes ill or suffers from stress or anxiety this can result in premature birth and health problems for the baby such as -: low birth weight‚ undeveloped organs‚ problems with sight and hearing. These are all problems that could delay their development. Some children are born with

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    Martin Skelton Word Count 2550 Discuss the psychological and physical effects of loss and grief: How might an ethical therapist incorporate this knowledge into his/her work? Base your answer of the theories and models presented in Module 7. It is a fact of life that every individual will experience loss and grief at some point in their lives but in certain circumstances they may be unaware of it. Loss can come in many disguises from the easily recognisable bereavement‚ to redundancy‚ children leaving

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    Depression is known as ‘common cold’ of psychiatry because of its recurrence (Selignman‚ 1973). Depression is a disorder which is outined by disturbances in mood. Depression has a lot of symptoms such as loss of appetite‚ feelings of sadness‚ insomnia‚ loss of drive‚ loss of self confidence‚ feelings of hopelesssness‚ suicidal thoughts‚ and many more (Psychology 4A.com). Psychodynamically Freud was the first person to offer possible explanations of depression. He was also the first person to notice

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    mother during the first year of life. If an individual doesn’t have positive experiences with his or her mother during the first year of life‚ then a predisposition of depression may be planted. This also links in with the ideas of theorists such as Bowlby. There is research to back this up‚ linking adverse early experiences to greater likelihood of developing a mood disorder later in life e.g. Foltyn et al (1998) who found in a study of Polish medical students that 25% of examined students had depression

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