💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 4515.gmi captured on 2021-12-05 at 23:47:19. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-03)

➡️ Next capture (2023-01-29)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Most parents 'lie to their children'

By Sean Coughlan BBC News education correspondent

Most parents tells lies to their children as a tactic to change their

behaviour, suggests a study of families in the United States and China.

The most frequent example was parents threatening to leave children alone in

public unless they behaved.

Persuasion ranged from invoking the support of the tooth fairy to telling

children they would go blind unless they ate particular vegetables.

Another strategic example was: "That was beautiful piano playing."

The study, published in the International Journal of Psychology, examined the

use of "instrumental lying" - and found that such tactically-deployed

falsehoods were used by an overwhelming majority of parents in both the United

States and China - based on interviews with about 200 families.

'I'll buy it next time'

The most commonly used lie - popular with both US and Chinese families - was

parents pretending to a child that they were going to walk away and leave the

child to his or her tantrum.

"The pervasiveness of this lie may relate to the universality of the challenge

parents face in trying to leave a place against their child's wishes," say the

researchers.

Another lie that was common in both countries was the "false promise to buy a

requested toy at some indefinite time in the future".

Start Quote

Your pet went to live on your uncle's farm where he will have more space to run

around

Well-intentioned or immoral? An example of what parents told their children

Researchers established different categories of these untruths.

There were "untrue statements related to misbehaviour", which included: ''If

you don't behave, I will call the police," and: "If you don't quiet down and

start behaving, the lady over there will be angry with you.''

If these seem rather unheroic examples of parenting by proxy threat, there are

some more startling lies recorded.

Under the category of "Untrue statements related to leaving or staying" a

parent was recorded as saying: "If you don't follow me, a kidnapper will come

to kidnap you while I'm gone."

There were also lies motivated by protecting a child's feelings - labelled as

"Untrue statements related to positive feelings."

This included the optimistic: "Your pet went to live on your uncle's farm where

he will have more space to run around."

A rather self-serving untruth was used for a quick getaway from a toy shop: ''I

did not bring money with me today. We can come back another day."

There was also a selection of lies relating to "fantasy characters", also used

to enforce good behaviour, such as in the run-up to Christmas.

'Broccoli makes you taller'

The study found no clear difference between the lies used by mothers and

fathers, according to researchers, who were from psychology departments at the

University of California San Diego in the US, Zhejiang Normal University,

Jinhua in China and the University of Toronto, Canada.

Although levels of such "instrumental lying" were high in both countries, they

were highest in China.

The study found there was an acceptance of such lies among parents when they

were used as a way of reinforcing desirable social behaviour.

For example, the lie told to children that they would grow taller for every

bite of broccoli was seen as encouraging healthy eating habits.

The study raises the longer-term issue of the impact on families of such

opportunistic approaches to the truth. It suggests it could influence family

relationships as children get older.

Researchers concluded that this raises "important moral questions for parents

about when, if ever, parental lying is justified".