A-Levels Psychology A-Level AQA A (Unit 1 Attachment and early social development) Mind Map on HODGES and TIZARD (1989), created by moeingthelawn on 10/05/2014.
The effects of institutionalization is one way to study privation. In these situations the infants had never had the opportunity to form any attachments.
Hodges and Tizard conducted a longitudinal study (over a period of 16 years) investigating institutionalized infants.
AIMS
To investigate the effects of early privation on later
social and emotional development
Longitudinal study
of ex-institutional
children
PROCEDURES
Natural experiment
Annotations:
Independent variable was not manipulated and occurred naturally
65 children placed in institution
when under 4 months old
By 4 years, 24 had been adopted
and 15 returned to original home;
rest remained in institution
Policy in institution that caregivers are not allowed to
form attachments with children = suggests that children
experienced early privation
Assessed at 8 years
and 16 years
Interviewed adopted and restored children
Also interviewed parents, teachers, and peers
There was also data
from a control group of
'normal' peers
FINDINGS
Differences
Adopted children generally had close
attachments to parents and good family
relationships
Restored children did not have this
closeness and attachment
Similarities
Outside the family, both adopted and
restored children more likely to seek
adult attention and approval
More likely than control group
Both groups were less successful in peer
relationships than the control group