Mary Ainsworth: The Attachment Theory and Its Influence

581 Words2 Pages

Mary Ainsworth was born on December 1, 1913 and died on March 21, 1999 (Cherry 2016). She was born in Glendale, Ohio but later moved to Toronto, Canada when she was five because her father’s job got transferred. At the age of 16 she attended the University of Toronto and earned her Bachelors, Masters, and Ph.D. in psychology. She later taught psychology at the university and went on to join the Canadian Women’s Army Corp. in 1950 she married her husband, Leonard Ainsworth, and moved to London. While in London she worked beside psychologist John Bowlby researching the attachment theory. The attachment theory was mainly focused on why children experience separation anxiety and distress when they are away from their mother or caregiver. John Bowlby believed that children are born with a biologically programmed tendency to seek and remain close to attachment figures (Cherry 2015). It is stated that children that children with strong attachments to their mother would have a better chance of survival in adulthood. Her research on the attachment theory gave her an insight on mother and child interactions. When she returned back to the United States she began to teach at John Hopkins University. While teaching at the university she began a new research called “Strange Situation.” …show more content…

In secure attachment the child is very engages with others when the mother is around but when the mother leaves the child alone with a stranger they become mad. During insecure avoidant the child is scared of the stranger while the mother is there. Lastly, insecure ambivalent is when the child has mixed feelings when the mother is present or not. There is also a fourth type known as disorganized/disorientated but it was founded by Main and Solomon in 1990 (McLeod 2008). This attachment is when the child is distressed when the mother leaves and is happy when she

More about Mary Ainsworth: The Attachment Theory and Its Influence

Open Document