SECTION
3
You should spend about 20 minutes on
Questions 1-14 which are based on Reading Passage below.
Compliance or Noncompliance for
children
|
A
|
Many
Scientists believe that socialization takes a long process, while
compliance is the outset of it. Accordingly, compliance for education of
children is the priority. Motivationally distinct forms of child
compliance, mutually positive affect, and maternal control, observed in 3
control contexts in 103 dyads of mothers and their 26-41-month-old
children, were examined as correlates of internalization, assessed using
observations of children while alone with prohibited temptations and
maternal ratings. One form of compliance (committed compliance), when the
child appeared committed wholeheartedly to the maternal agenda and eager to
endorse and accept it, was emphasized. Mother-child mutually positive
affect was both a predictor and a concomitant of committed compliance. Children
who shared positive affect with their mothers showed a high level of
committed compliance and were also more internalized. Differences and
similarities between children's compliance to requests and prohibitions
("Do’ vs.
"Don't" demand contexts) were also explored. Maternal
"Dos" appeared more challenging to toddlers than the "Don'ts."
Some individual coherence of behavior was also found across both demand contexts.
The implications of committed compliance for emerging internalized
regulators of conduct are discussed.
|
B
|
A number of
parents were not easy to be aware of the compliance, some even overlooked
their children's noncompliance. Despite good education, these children did not
follow the words from their parents on several occasion 'especially boys in
certain ages. Fortunately, this rate was acceptable; some parents could be
patient with the noncompliance. .Someone held that noncompliance is
probably not a wrong thing. In order to determine the effects of different
parental disciplinary techniques on young children's compliance and
noncompliance, mothers were trained to observe emotional incidents
involving their own toddler-aged children. Reports of disciplinary
encounters were analyzed in terms of the types of discipline used (reasoning,
verbal prohibition, physical coercion, love withdrawal, and combinations
thereof) and children's responses to that discipline (compliance/
noncompliance and avoidance). The relation between compliance/
noncompliance and type of misdeed (harm to persons, harm to property, and lapses
of self-control) was also analyzed. Results indicated that love withdrawal combined
with other techniques was most effective in securing children's compliance
and that its effectiveness was not a function of the type of technique with
which it was combined. Avoidant responses and affective reunification with
the parent were more likely to follow love withdrawal than any other
technique. Physical coercion was somewhat less effective than love
withdrawal, while reasoning and verbal prohibition were not at all effective
except when both were combined with physical coercion.
|
C
|
Noncompliant
Children sometimes prefer to say no directly as they were younger, they are
easy to deal with the relationship with contemporaries. when they are
growing up .During the period that children is getting elder, who may learn
to use more advanced approaches for their noncompliance. They are more
skillful to negotiate or give reasons for refusal rather than show their
opposite idea to parents directly/' Said Henry Porter, scholar working in
Psychology Institute of UK. He indicated that noncompliance means growth in
some way, may have benefit for children. Many Experts held different viewpoints
in recent years, they tried drilling compliance into children. His
collaborator Wallace Freisen believed that Organizing child's daily activities
so that they occur in the same order each day as much as possible. This
first strategy for defiant children is ultimately the most important.
Developing a routine helps a child to know what to expect and increases the
chances that he or she will comply with things such as chores, homework,
and hygiene requests. When undesirable activities occur in the same order
at optimal times during the day, they become habits that are not questioned,
but done without thought.
Chances are
that you have developed some type of routine for yourself in terms of showering,
cleaning your house, or doing other types of work. You have an idea in your
mind when you will do these things on a regular basis and this helps you to
know what to expect. In fact, you have probably already been using most of
these compliance strategies for yourself without realizing it. For
children, without setting these expectations on a daily basis by making
them part of a regular routine, they can become very upset. Just like
adults, children think about what they plan to do that day and expect to be
able to do what they want. So, when you come along and ask them to do
something they weren’t already planning to do that day, this can result in
automatic refusals and other undesirable defiant behavior. However, by
using this compliance strategy with defiant children, these activities are
done almost every day in the same general order and the child expects to
already do them.
|
D
|
Doctor Steven
Walson addressed that organizing fun activities to occur after frequently refused
activities. This strategy also works as a positive reinforcer when the
child complies with your requests. By arranging your day so that things
often refused occur right before highly preferred activities, you are able
to eliminate defiant behavior and motivate your child's behavior of doing
the undesirable activity. This is not to be presented in a way that the
preferred activity is only allowed if a defiant child does the
non-preferred activity. However, you can word your request in a way so that
your child assumes that you have to do the non-preferred activity before
moving on to the next preferred activity. For example, you do not want to
say something such as, "If you clean your room we can play a
game." Instead word your request like this,"As soon as you are
done cleaning your room we will be able to play that really fun game you
wanted to play."
|
E
|
Psychologist
Paul Edith insisted praise is the best way to make children to comply with.
This is probably a common term you are used to hearing by now. If you
praise your child's behavior, he or she will be more likely to do that
behavior. So, it is essential to use praise when working with defiant
children. It also provides your child with positive attention. However, it
is important to know how to praise children in a way that encourages future
automatic reinforcement for your child when doing a similar behavior.
|
Questions 27-31
Choose the correct letter, A, B,
C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 27-31
on your answer sheet,
27
|
The children,
especially boys received good education may
|
A
|
always comply
with their parents, words
|
B
|
be good at math
|
C
|
have a high
score at school
|
D
|
disobey their parents’ order
sometimes
|
28
|
to their
children’s compliance and noncompliance,parents
|
A
|
must be aware of the
compliance
|
B
|
ask for help
from their teachers
|
C
|
some of them may ignore their
noncompliance
|
D
|
pretend not
to see
|
29
|
According to Henry Porter
noncompliance for children
|
A
|
are entirely
harmful
|
B
|
may have positive effects
|
C
|
needs
medicine assistance
|
D
|
should be treated by expert
doctor
|
30
|
When children
are growing up, they
|
A
|
always try to directly say no
|
B
|
are more
skillful to negotiate
|
C
|
learn to cheat instead of
noncompliance
|
D
|
tend to keep
silent
|
31
|
Which is the possible reaction
the passage mentioned for elder children and younger ones if they don’t
want to comply with the order
|
A
|
elder
children prefer to refuse directly
|
B
|
elder ones refuse to answer
|
C
|
younger
children may reject directly
|
D
|
younger ones may save any
words
|
Questions 32-35
Look at the following people and list
of statements below.
Match each person with the correct
statement.
Write the correct letter A-G in boxes
32-35 on your answer sheet.
32
|
Henry Porter
|
33
|
Wallace Freisen
|
34
|
Steven
Walson
|
35
|
Paul Edith
|
List of statements
|
A
|
children of
all ages will indirectly show noncompliance
|
B
|
elder
children tend to negotiate rather than show noncompliance
|
C
|
converse
behavior means noncompliance
|
D
|
organizing
fun activities to occur after frequently refused activities
|
E
|
organizing
child’s daily activities in the same order as much as possible.
|
F
|
use praise in
order to make children compliant
|
G
|
take the
children to school at a early age
|
Questions 36-40
Do the following statements agree with
the claims of the writer in Reading Passage? In boxes 36-40 on your answer
sheet, write
TRUE
|
if the
statement is true
|
FALSE
|
if the
statement is false
|
NOT GIVEN
|
if the information is not
given in the passage
|
36
|
Socialization takes a long process, while compliance is the
beginning of it.
|
37
|
Many parents were difficult to be aware of the compliance or
noncompliance.
|
38
|
Noncompliant
Children are simple to deal with the relationship with the people in the same
age when they are growing up.
|
39
|
Experts never tried drilling compliance into children.
|
40
|
Psychologist
Paul Edith negated the importance that knowing how to praise children in an
encouraged way.
|
|
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