首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Should A Kid Be Guided to Tell a White Lie? It’s my family’s tradition to exchange girls on Christmas Eve. Before we did so,
Should A Kid Be Guided to Tell a White Lie? It’s my family’s tradition to exchange girls on Christmas Eve. Before we did so,
admin
2010-07-24
81
问题
Should A Kid Be Guided to Tell a White Lie?
It’s my family’s tradition to exchange girls on Christmas Eve. Before we did so, I whispered to my uncle and his wife, "Just want you to know: I think what I got you is really cool, so just tell me you like it, no matter what, okay?"
I know that sounds rude, but there’s another Christmas custom in my family: we give each other weird gifts.
There is a sweet reason for this. My grandparents grew up during the Depression, and there were years when they had no gifts at all. So my grandmother and her siblings(兄弟姐妹) would gift-wrap their old socks and clothes, just so they had something to open on Christmas. Pretend presents were better than none at all.
My grandmother never really got over those early years, so, for the rest of her life, she went a little crazy at the holidays. She’d start buying gifts in October. It didn’t matter what it was. Socks, toothbrushes, used paperbacks she’d read but didn’t like, all went under the tree. Contents of catalog "mystery boxes" meant we spent another hour unwrapping presents. One of my more memorable gifts: a single piece of clear plastic labeled "face shield." I was apparently to hold it in front of my eyes when I used hair spray.
We all thanked Grandma greatly no matter what we got. As a little kid, this pattern of gratitude for the terrible presents puzzled me; it took a long time for me to understand it was all right to laugh at some of her gifts. Now I don’t really know if my aunt and uncle actually liked the gift I gave them. They said they did, but since I coached them to tell me they love it, I’ll never really know if that was the truth.
All of these make me think of the work of McGill professor Victoria Talwar. As an expert in children’s lying behavior, Talwar has been studying how kids respond to unwanted gifts. When they get a gift they hate, can they still thank someone and pretend to love it?
Talwar tests kids’ ability to do this, by asking kids to pick a toy they want; if they win a game, they get the chosen toy. There are plastic horses, a small car, a few other items, including an unwrapped, dirty, worn, used bar of soap. At some point in the game, there’s a switch in the adults who play with the kids. So, instead of giving the child her chosen toy, the late-arriving adult gives the child the soap.
Then, the researchers watch what happens. 68% of kids, aged 3 to 11, will spontaneously say they love the gift of old ugly soap. The older they are, the more likely they are to say a white lie about the gift. And if parents encourage the children to say how much they like the present, the percentage of kids lying about the gift increases to 87%.
At this point, some may be saying that a white lie isn’t a lie. That’s because you are looking at lying from the adult perspective--that lies are acceptable, when told with the intent of helping someone, or protecting another’s feelings. But kids don’t think of lying in the same way. For them, the intent behind a lie--for good or for ill--is irrelevant. It is so irrelevant that, for very young kids, you can’t even lie by accident. Someone who gives out wrong information, but believed it to be true, is still a liar in these kids’ book.
Kids just don’t believe that lying comes in shades of white or gray. Lying is much simpler than that: lying is telling somebody something that isn’t so; lying is really bad; and lying gets you punished. And if it gets you punished, you shouldn’t do it. In Talwar’s lab, parents have literally cheered to hear their kids lie about how great it is to have received the old soap. The parents have pride over their children’s knowing the socially appropriate response.
Talwar’s regularly amazed by this. The parents never even seem to realize that the child told a lie. They never want to scold the child afterwards, or talk about the kid’s behavior.
Regardless of the parents’ pride, the kids aren’t happy about their successfully lying. Instead, it can be torture for them.
I was at Talwar’s lab when she was doing a version of the unwanted gift experiment with kids in the first and second grades. Watching kid after kid react to that gross bar of soap, I could really see how emotionally difficult it is for kids to tell a white lie. The kids were disappointed when they were handed the soap, but that was nothing compared to the discomfort they showed while having to lie about liking it. They are uneasy. Some looked like they were going to cry. It was simply painful to watch. Indeed, Talwar has found that some kids just can’t even bring themselves to say something nice about the present. About 20% of 11-year-olds just refuse to tell a white lie about that unwanted gift--even after their parents encouraged them to do so. And about 14% of kids still won’t tell a white lie, even after their parents specifically explained the prosocial (亲社会的) reasons to tell the lie. These kids just can’t reconcile the disconnect between knowing how bad lying is, and being told they should now lie. Talwar cautions that we need to recognize that, at least from the kids’ point of view, white lies really are still lies. We should take care to explain the motivation behind the untruth--that we want to protect the other person’s feelings. Kids may still fail to completely understand the distinction, but at least it will encourage them to think about others’ feelings when they act. And we need to reassure children that they won’t be punished for a specific white lie--because they did something nice for someone else.
Talwar also warns that we adults should pay attention to our own use of white lies. Kids notice these untruths-and that we rarely get punished for them. If kids believe that we regularly lie to get out of uncomfortable social situations, they are more likely to adopt a similar strategy of lying. If we don’t watch it, we could unintentionally be giving kids yet another present: a license to lie.
If adults continue to tell white lies, kids may be more likely to adopt this strategy of lying to escape______.
选项
答案
uncomfortable social situations
解析
此处需填入名词性成分,作escape的宾语。该句to get out of uncomfortable social situations是成年人说谎的目的,similar strategy表明小孩采取同样的策略,而同样的策略是为了同样的目的,且escape是对原文get out of的同义改写,可知答案为其后的宾语uncomfortable social situations。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/pMN7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、BuyingapairofAdidastennisshoes.B、AskingherfatheraboutAdidasshoes.C、DiscussingwithherfatheraboutAdidasshoes.
A、Becauseshemarriedamanwhodislikedchildren.B、Becauseshewasameanperson.C、Becausesheforcedhimtostaywithher.D
A、Tohelpinternationalstudentspreparetoenterinstitutionsofhigherlearning.B、ToteachstudentshowtouseEnglishinthe
A、Afterhemovedtoacityinthesouthwest.B、Beforehefinishedhighschool.C、Afterhegraduatedfromcollege.D、Beforeheha
A、Stayathome.B、Gototravelagenciesformoreinformation.C、GotoHawaiiforatravel.D、Turntootherfriendsforabetter
Learningcouldnotoccurwithoutthefunctionpopularlynamedmemory.So-calledintelligentbehaviourdemandsmemory,rememberin
Learningcouldnotoccurwithoutthefunctionpopularlynamedmemory.So-calledintelligentbehaviourdemandsmemory,rememberin
Internetvotinghappensallthetime,butusuallyit’sconfinedtotopicssuchas"WhoisthecutestcastmemberofPartyofFiv
PabloRuizPicassowasaSpanishpainter,【B1】______andengraverwholivedfrom1881to1973.Hewasavery【B2】______(independent
A、Exposingoneselftothetargetculture.B、Attendingregularlyagoodlanguageprogram.C、Comingupwithastudyplan.D、Develo
随机试题
某工程施工招标,由评标委员会负责资格审查,这种资格审查方法属于()。
下列事件造成承包商成本上升(和)项目工期延误,承包商可以同时索赔工期和费用的包括()。
违约责任的承担方式主要包括()。
府城房地产开发公司为内资企业,公司于2013年1月~2016年2月开发“东丽家园”住宅项目,发生相关业务如下:(1)2013年1月通过竞拍获得一宗国有土地使用权,合同记载总价款17000万元,并规定2013年3月1日动工开发。由于公司资金短缺,于2014
目前我国商业银行的代理政策性银行业务主要代理()和()的业务。
下列各项中,属于统印发票领购方式的有()。
分析问题的视角更为结构取向的是( )。
让丽丽先后学习两组难度相当、性质相似的材料、随后的检查发现她对前面一组材料的回忆效果不如后面一组好,这是由于受到()。
Researchershavestudiedthepoorasindividuals,asfamiliesandhouseholds,asmembersofpoorcommunities,neighborhoodsand
ChangingTrendsinMagazineIndustryTheimpactofNewYork-basedFashionCityMagazine’snewadvertisingcampaigntookownerCh
最新回复
(
0
)