Forget ‘Attachment.’ It’s All About ‘Activation’

Posted on 15. Apr, 2010 by Brian Reid in research

I’ve never been an huge believer in the whole “attachment parenting” thing, where ensuring your kid’s security (and making sure your kid knows it) is the central point in parenting. It seemed suffocating, the exact opposite of the kind of freedom that kids needed to taste to be engaged in the world. But I didn’t have any evidence that my viewpoint was at all valid.

Enter validation: last week, Daniel Paquette, a professor at the Université de Montréal School of Psychoeducation, published a study that suggested that “activation theory” might be as important as “attachment theory.” Activation theory is the idea that encouraging kids to do out and explore is vital developmentally. (There is a yin and a yang here: ideally, kids should feel secure *and* able to engage in the world.)

The paper focuses on kids 12 to 18 months, and the test of activation includes, among other things, watching what happens when unsteady toddlers head for the stairs. In a nutshell, if you want activated kids, being just about an arm’s length away seems to be best. (Closer, and your kids won’t explore enough. Too far, and they learn recklessness.)

The press release is here, and it makes for interesting reading. And — naturally — there is a dad twist: dads are more likely to give the kids the space they need to explore, since dads, in general, are less protective and that is linked to “activation.” I also pulled the paper, which noted that while there was a difference favoring dads over mom, that number wasn’t significant (though the authors had plenty of suggestion for why it was still probably true). What *was* significant was that boys get activated — by moms and by dads — more than girls. So that’s disappointing but probably not surprising.

As with all early studies, it’s hard (and unwise) to shape a parenting strategy around a single piece of academic research. But it does make me happy to see this avenue of research, and I’m curious to see what happens next with activation theory.

4 Responses to “Forget ‘Attachment.’ It’s All About ‘Activation’”

  1. Dad is in the House

    15. Apr, 2010

    This is quite interesting, actually. That’s the approach I’ve sort of stumbled upon-being around and letting my daughter explore. Glad to know that I’m doing something right!

  2. Philip

    15. Apr, 2010

    I guess the research is needed but It has been a long time since I have seen any results that weren’t also reached through common sense. Still it add to the understanding of behavioral development which isn’t a bad thing I guess. Thanks for sharing, I hadn’t run across this one yet.

  3. Ryan S~

    21. Apr, 2010

    I’m late on this but just thought I should say that attachment parenting is more geared towards the first year where children are dependent on parents for just about everything. It’s when kids start to feel the need to stretch their wings that the switch to activation is important.

    One style of parenting isn’t going to work with any child so you have to be fully prepared to adjust as needed.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. A New Parenting Style «Random Acts Of Parenting - 19. Apr, 2010

    [...] Most recently, Dr. Sears Attachment Parenting was the new gold standard. I found out through Rebel Dad that I have missed the boat on attachment parenting and we are moving on to Activation. Really [...]

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