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Exemplar: Deprivation and trauma

The following essay is a sample response for the question: Discuss potential effects of deprivation and/or trauma on later development.

The sample response is an example of an exemplary response that should receive top marks. Comments about the essay are included below.

The highlighted areas of the essay demonstrate critical thinking.

 

Sample essay

Essay contentMarker's comment
There are many factors that may affect a child’s development.  Aversive Childhood Experiences, known as ACEs, can play a key role in both a child’s cognitive and social development.  Case studies have shown that abuse and deprivation of a parent’s care have long-term effects on development.  However, the effects are not easily predictable because people have different levels of resilience.The introduction presents the topic and takes a position.
An early case study was carried out in communist Czechoslovakia by Koluchova.  She studied a set of twins who had been seriously abused by their father and step-mother. They had been physically beaten and malnourished for seven years before they were found.  They were adopted shortly after being found. The boys very quickly gained strength and began to walk as well as grow. The boys' IQ scores were very low when they were found.  However, over time their IQs slowly improved until they were at the level of other students. An appropriate study is identified and described.
The stress of abuse can cause damage to the hippocampus which is responsible for transferring information from short-term to long-term memory.  Stress releases glucocorticoids.  Long-term exposure to stress hormones can lead to memory impairment. Carion found that children who had suffered abuse had smaller hippocampi. The Koluchova study did not use an MRI so we do not know if that was the case for the twins.  Carion also only measured the brains of the children once – the study was not longitudinal.  So, we don’t know if they would grow as was seen in the twins. The low IQ could also be due to malnourishment.  Researchers in Guatemala found that when children received a high protein supplement, they began to catch up with children who did not live in poverty. It seems that when recovering from abuse, the first thing that happens is that the physical changes happen.  Then there the child’s cognitive abilities improve.  Finally, the child develops social skills.There is an explanation of the study's findings and a link to supporting research.

The twin study is a case study.  This gives us a lot of in-depth information about the twins and it is done over a long period of time, which allows us to see change over time.  In addition, several tests were done on the twins, showing triangulation of data.  This means that the data is more reliable.  The study is also holistic – it did not focus only on one aspect of the children, but looked at the physical, cognitive and social development of the children.

An evaluation of case studies as a method.
However, case studies also have limitations.  With such a small sample size, it is not possible to generalize the findings to all children who have suffered abuse.  In this case specifically, there is the variable that the twins were together the whole time.  The fact that they formed an attachment to each other may be a reason that they were found to be so resilient.  Research has shown that having social support is a key factor in resilience. Although we cannot generalize from a single case study, there are several similar case studies that have similar findings, so we can see a trend. In addition, the study is limited to one gender and culture.  Another variable that may affect the results of the study is that we do not know what the children’s potential IQ actually was.  So we cannot really talk about the effect of the trauma.An explanation of the limitations and areas of uncertainty in the study.

Another study of deprivation and trauma was the Romanian orphan study.  Rutter studied Romanian orphans who were adopted by British parents to measure their development.  The orphans had been in terrible conditions.  Many were starving and there were cases of abuse.  All of the children were adopted between birth and 4 years old.   Rutter compared their development to a group of British orphans who had been adopted by British parents and who had not suffered deprivation. Rutter carried out a series of cognitive tests as well as interviewed the parents. He found that the longer the children had been institutionalized, the more likely they were to have cognitive and social problems.  Social problems included a lack of close relationships and attention seeking behaviour.  Rutter concluded that the children that had the best chance of recovery were those that were adopted the earliest (less than 6 months old).

The Rutter study is described and its findings explained.
Rutter’s study is a longitudinal study, so he was able to observe change over time.  Another strength is that it had a large sample size.   However, once again, it is a case study, so it suffers from some of the same limitations as the Czech twin study. In addition, it is not possible to know how much of the children’s behaviour is due to malnourishment, privation or abuse.A general evaluation of the Rutter study.

One of the issues with deprivation and trauma studies is that a cause and effect relationship cannot be established.  There is no ethical way to carry out experimental research, so the researchers are reliant on correlational dataSince it is not possible to control variables and it is not possible to measure physical, cognitive and social ability before the abuse, the best that we can find are trends.  Modern research on resilience seems to show that biological factors may also affect whether a person recovers or is left traumatized for their whole life. Another problem with the deprivation and trauma research is that not all trauma is the same.  Comparing children who were sexually abused, neglected or physically tortured may not be the right way to do research.  It may also make a difference who did the abuse and what other ACEs the child suffered in their development.

A discussion of limitations of research on the effect of deprivation and trauma on development.
It appears that the stress of abuse and deprivation has a potential effect on the development of children. These effects are physiological, cognitive and social.  However, there is some optimism in the research that shows that many children are more resilient than we can imagine.  However, as we see with Rutter’s research, there may be a critical period for improvement.
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