"Describe and evaluate bowlbys theory of maternal deprivation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Describe and Evaluate two theories of the formation of romantic relationships In 1970 Byrne and Clore introduced the reward/ need satisfaction theory for the formation of relationships. They suggested that we are attracted to individuals whose presence is rewarding for us‚ and that naturally we find stimuli rewarding if it meets an unmet need; the more rewards someone provides for us‚ the more we should be attracted to them. They believed that the formation if relationships was linked with the

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    development in the late 1950’s. He is an outstanding example of research in the Piagetian tradition. He set out to improve and extend the work of Piaget. His work focused on Moral Development and Moral reasoning and began to develop a stage theory of moral thinking. His theories were based on the way children‚ adolescents and adults develop moral reasoning. The first three of these stages were in essence Piaget’s initial formations concerning cognitive reasoning. In his doctoral dissertation (1958a) while

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    Describe and evaluate ONE theory of gender development. Cognitive psychologists believe that the most important part of acquiring sex/gender identity lies in the child’s growth and understanding of what male/female means. This can be determined by Kohlberg (1966) who suggested that children need to develop an understanding of gender before they can develop a gender identity of their own and puts forward a stage theory of gender development. His theory proposes that a child’s understanding of gender

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    John Bowlby

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    John Bowlby: John Bowlby was the first psychologist who started an extended study on attachment. According to Bowlby’s Attachment Theory‚ attachment is a ‘lasting psychological connectedness between human beings’. What is attachment- When a person is emotionally bonded with another person then attachment starts. Attachment can be defined as a unique emotional bond held between carer and child. Bowlby believed that early experiences in childhood can have a lasting impression on your development

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    John Bowlby

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    introduction to one of his many books‚ John Bowlby quotes Graham Greene; ‘Unhappiness in a child accumulates because he sees no end to the dark tunnel. The thirteen weeks of a term may just as well be thirteen years.’ It is quite clear that John’s childhood was not a happy one. He experienced many years of separation from family and it can be connected as to why he developed the theory of attachment. Edward John Mostyn Bowlby‚ known as John Bowlby‚ was born in 1907 in London as the fourth

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    feelings regarding maternal depravation (write at least five hundred words). “Maternal depravation” has been used to describe a whole range of situations in which the infant is deprived of his/her relationship with its mother/ primary carer. Bowlbys theory of “Maternal depravation” was founded on the hypothesis‚ that if a child is detached on a physical and emotional level from its primary carer that this will have a long term effects emotionally for that child. According to Bowlby this detachment

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    Attachment is a key part of childhood and there are many theories on how humans attach to their caregivers in childhood. Bowlby’s(1958) theory on childhood attachment drives from his idea that humans have an innate disposition to form a close attachment to one special caregiver or monotropy. This is the survival of the fittest idea‚ that only babies with strong attachments to their mothers will live through to adulthood and although that is not something that strictly applies to modern day life

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    Life and Work of John Bowlby

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    Bowlby was born in London to an upper-middle-class family. He was the fourth of six children and was brought up by a nanny in the British fashion of his class at that time. His father‚ Sir Anthony Bowlby‚ first Baronet‚ was surgeon to the King ’s Household‚ with a tragic history: at age five‚ Sir Anthony ’s own father (John ’s grandfather) was killed while serving as a war correspondent in the Opium Wars. Normally‚ Bowlby saw his mother only one hour a day after teatime‚ though during the summer

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    Prison Experiment Support Deprivation Theory Nick McCoy University of Iowa Philip G. Zimbardo in a pursuit to analyze the results of placing society accepted “good” people in an evil place constructed an experiment which represented a simulation of prison life. Ordinary middle class males were placed in a situation to monitor activities and behavior these males displayed when subject to the harsh environments of a prison. The results of the experiment were much more detrimental than expected

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    How to Evaluate a Theory

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    HOW TO EVALUATE A THEORY The purpose of a good theory is to provide a conceptual framework for viewing and understanding phenomena.  From this perspective a theory is either useful or not useful.  A theory helps guide and focus attention‚ identify and define important variables‚ and postulate the relationships among them.  A good theory is not just another ’good idea‚’ but it is based on empirical data that makes it an adequate map of the territory for the current time.  Furthermore‚ a good theory

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