Not exact matches
They have identified a number of
different attachment styles to
describe the affectional bond children have with their parents or caregivers.
Attachment describes two
different dimensions that influence people's thoughts and behavior in relationships.4 People who are high on anxiety have negative views of themselves and worry that their partners will abandon them.
Bowlby
described three
different attachment styles based on the level of security in the
attachment bond: Secure, anxious / ambivalent, and avoidant.
The presentation will
describe how the same core process occurs in a range of quite
different - seeming therapies — such as AEDP, Coherence Therapy, EMDR, EFT, and IPNB — and will show why memory reconsolidation is poised to create four breakthroughs in the psychotherapy field: enhanced effectiveness, a unified understanding of diverse therapies of transformational change, clarification of the role of
attachment in therapy, and an advance beyond nonspecific common factors theory in our understanding of the process of change.
Children's development of the cognitive and social skills needed for later success in school may be best supported by a parenting style known as responsive parenting.1 Responsiveness is an aspect of supportive parenting
described across
different theories and research frameworks (e.g.
attachment, socio - cultural) as playing an important role in providing a strong foundation for children to develop optimally.2 - 4 Parenting that provides positive affection and high levels of warmth and is responsive in ways that are contingently linked to a young child's signals («contingent responsiveness») are the affective - emotional aspects of a responsive style.5 These aspects, in combination with behaviours that are cognitively responsive to the child's needs, including the provision of rich verbal input and maintaining and expanding on the child's interests, provide the range of support necessary for multiple aspects of a child's learning.6
The kind of
attachment children develop to their parents has been related to
different parenting styles,
described by dimensions like autonomy support (Skinner et al., 2005), parental sensitivity (Belsky et al., 1991) and parental control (Barber and Harmon, 2002; Kuppens et al., 2013).