Children seem to show a near immunity, at times, to the power of negative example. I recall a girl I knew well growing up who, immediately after reading Harriet The Spy, began a surveillance program listening in to her parents on the other phone -- until she was caught and roundly punished. Somehow the lesson that spying on people had got Harriet into trouble had been lost, and the fascination of eavesdropping and writing things down in a notebook had remained.
In similar vein, MrsDarwin recently attempted to give the girls an illustrative example of how she had, at a very young age, not understood the purpose of the mass, and had thought that she was being left out of a "snack" at communion time. That this was presented in contrast to the truth that we believe it is Christ who becomes present on the altar was lost on the girls, who proceeded to demand repeated: "Mommy, why did you want a snack in mass? Can I have a snack?" Quieting them down in time to actually go to mass proved a challenge. (Note to selves: No creative attempts at catechesis right before mass.)
This seemed odd to me at first given the numbers of fairy tales that center around the horrible consequences visited upon those who go astray. Surely centuries of negative examples would not have been dreamed up if the technique simply did not work upon the young. But as I thought about it, such stories are always simply and clearly constructed: Introduce character, the character makes a fatal mistake, the character suffers grievous consequences. This construction, children seem to understand quite readily.
The difficulty comes when an essentially sympathetic and realistic character does something which is, by adults, intended to be a negative example. If this character does not seem to be an essentially "bad" character, young children seem to have great difficulty in understanding that this is a bad choice and should not be imitated.
The boy who cried wolf can be readily understood as an object lesson for the very reason that there is no more to his character than that he cried wolf. But if that boy were named Brian and there was a whole children's novel about him, in the middle of which he carried out the crying wolf stunt, I suspect that many children would think it sounded like good fun and want to give it a go themselves.
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3 comments:
If you ever wondered why Lewis constantly harped on that business about never closing a wardrobe door behind you when you hid in it, now you know. It was just a literary form of "Don't try this at home, kids!"
Oh boy. Now this raises an incredibly important and difficult question:
How DO you achieve the formation you want for your children?
Here's a quote:
"Adam was but human--this explains it all. He did not want the apple for the apple's sake, he wanted it only because it was forbidden. The mistake was in not forbidding the serpent; then he would have eaten the serpent."
-- Mark Twain, "Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar"
It is a difficult, very fragile process; even history's famous examples--the Spartans, the upper-class Romans, 18th-Century European "gentlemen"; all had a chronic problem with individuals betraying the standard--not to mention incidents of mass collapse of the whole standard.
Anyway, I think you touched on a point that, at least, affected me: If the character who "misbehaved" had a lot of fun flaunting authority, no matter what happened to him in the end, lots of kids (including the gray-haired variety who should have grown up but never did) would want to emulate him. Darth Maul was one of the most popular of the Star Wars characters.
But the stories that helped me were the ones that showed the "cool, rebellious" character to ultimately not be very likable at all.
Not just unfortunate; not likable.
LogEyed Roman
"But the stories that helped me were the ones that showed the 'cool, rebellious' character to ultimately not be very likable at all."
What stories would those be?
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