Appreciating the Importance of Attachment in Assessment
Target Staff
Practitioners who work with children and young people, who have responsibility for early help or permanency planning.
Course Duration
One day
Aims
To provide participants with an opportunity to increase knowledge, and understanding about the importance of developing secure attachments, and the impact of insecure attachments on children’s development.
To provide participants with the necessary knowledge and understanding about child development and attachment, to help them improve skills in supporting children and ultimately improving outcomes for them.
Outcomes
Participants will be able to
Have increased knowledge and understanding about research on attachment and the neuroscience of attachment.
Understand why attachment matters.
Have reflected on how poor attachment impacts upon children in their development.
Have considered implications for work with children who have not experienced secure attachment.
Understand how early care giving might have a long lasting impact on children’s development and how children might internalize their experiences of attunement with caregivers.
Have increased knowledge about the risk factors affecting attachment and which groups of children are vulnerable.
Be able to demonstrate an understanding of different types of secure and insecure attachment.
Have considered what neuroscience tells us about how trauma can affect emotions and learning.
Be able to appreciate and demonstrate the importance of considering the attachment of children in critically reflective practice and in undertaking good assessments.
Consider what is needed to help children recover from trauma.
Have considered the importance of observation and reflection on understanding attachment and family relationships