- Mon Nov 30, 2020 3:19 pm
#81599
Hi SS!
Answer choice (C) states: "If high-achieving, competitive parents were more child-centered, their children would be less aggressive." This statement suggests a more specific relationship than the one that we have in the stimulus. It suggests an inverse correlation between child-centered parents and aggression in children with a probable causal component in which being more or less child-centered results in less or more aggression.
From the stimulus, all we know is that " High-achieving, competitive, middle-class parents, whose children did not watch much television, had more aggressive children than parents who planned their lives in an organized, child-centered way, which included larger amounts of television viewing." This statement tells us that the parents who are more child-centered have less aggressive children. But it does not tell us that being more child-centered is what causes less aggressive children. In fact, we also know that the kids in child-centered households watch less television so the reduced aggression could be an effect of the interaction between child-centered parenting and television viewing. Or there could be some other key difference between these groups that accounts for why one group of children is less aggressive than the other.
So 1) we can't say for sure that being more child-centered would result in less aggressive children because it's very difficult to prove any specific causal relationship like this. And 2) even if we could prove a causal relationship, it would be difficult to do so in this case because maybe it's not being child-centered specifically that reduces aggression, but it's the interaction between child-centered parenting and television viewing together.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey