APOLOGY SPECIAL Should You Ask Your Children to
Apologize?
Have you ever felt deserving of an apology
and been upset when you didn’t get one? Have you ever found it hard to deliver
the words, I’m sorry?
Such experiences show how much apologies matter.
The importance placed on apologies is shared by many cultures. Diverse cultures
even share a great deal in common when it comes to how apologies are
communicated.
When adults feel wronged, apologies have been
shown to help in a variety of ways: Apologies can reduce retaliation; they can bring about forgiveness and empathy for wrongdoers; and they can aid in
the repair of broken
trust. Further, sincere apologies have the
physiological effect of lowering blood
pressure more quickly, especially among those who are prone to
hold on to anger.
How do children view and experience
apologies? And what do parents think about when to prompt their young ones to
apologize?
How children understand apologies
Research shows that children as young as age
four grasp the
emotional implications of apology. They
understand, for example, that an apology can improve the feelings of someone
who’s been upset. Preschoolers also judge apologizing wrongdoers to be more likable, and more desirable
as partners for interaction and cooperation.
Recent studies have tested the actual impact
of apologies on children. In one such study, a group of four to seven year olds
received an apology from a child who failed to share, while another group did
not get an apology. The participants who received the apology felt better and
viewed the offending child as nicer as well as more
remorseful.
Another study exposed children to a more
distressing event: A person knocked over a tower that six to seven year olds
were building. Some children got an apology; some did not. In this case, a
spontaneous apology did not improve children’s upset feelings. However, the
apology still had an impact. Children who got an apology were willing to share more of their attractive stickers with the person who
knocked over the tower compared to those who did not get an apology.
This finding suggests that an apology led
to forgiveness in children, even if sadness about the incident
understandably lingered. Notably, children did feel better
when the other person offered to help rebuild their toppled towers. In other
words, for children, both remorseful words and restorative actions make a
difference.
When does a child’s apology matter to
parents?
Although apologies carry meaning for
children, views on whether parents should ask their children to apologize vary.
A recent caution against
apology prompting was based on the mistaken notion that
young children have limited social understanding. In fact, young children understand a
great dealabout others’ viewpoints.
When and why parents prompt their children to
apologize has not been systematically studied. In order to gain better insight
into this question, I recently conducted a
study with my colleagues Jee Young Noh and Michael Rizzo at the University of
Maryland and Paul Harris at Harvard University.
We surveyed 483 parents of three- to
10-year-old children. Most participants were mothers, but there was a sizable
group of fathers as well. Parents were recruited via online parenting
discussion groups and came from communities all around the U.S. The discussion
groups had a variety of orientations toward parenting.
In order to account for the possibility that
parents might want to show themselves in the best light, we took a measure of “social
desirability bias” from each parent. The results reported here
emerged after we statistically corrected for the influence of this bias.
We asked parents to imagine their children
committing what they would consider to be “transgressions.” We then asked them
how likely they would be to prompt an apology in each scenario. We also asked
parents to rate how important they felt it was for their children to learn to
apologize in a variety of situations. Finally, we asked the parents about their
general approaches to parenting.
The large majority of parents (96 percent)
felt that it was important for their children to learn to apologize following
an incident in which children upset another person on purpose. Further, 88
percent felt it was important for their children to learn to apologize in the
aftermath of upsetting someone by mistake.
Fewer than five percent of the parents
surveyed endorsed the view that apologies are empty words. However, parents
were sensitive to context.
Parents reported being especially likely to
prompt apologies following their children’s intentional and accidental “moral
transgressions.” Moral transgressions involve issues of welfare, justice, and
rights, such as stealing from or hurting another person.
Parents viewed apologies as relatively less
important following their children’s transgressions of social convention (e.g.,
breaking a rule in a game, interrupting a conversation).
Apology as a way to mend rifts
It’s noteworthy that parents were very likely
to anticipate prompting apologies following incidents in which their children
upset others on purpose and by mistake.
This suggests that a focus for many parents,
when prompting apologies, is addressing the outcomesof their
children’s social missteps. Our data suggest that parents use apology prompts
to teach their children how to manage difficult social situations, regardless
of underlying intentions.
For example, 88 percent of parents indicated
that they would typically prompt an apology if their child broke a peer’s toy
by mistake (in the event that the child did not apologize spontaneously).
Indeed, parents especially anticipated prompting
apologies following accidental mishaps that involved their children’s peers
(and not parents themselves as the wronged parties). When a child’s peer is a
victim, parents likely recognize that apologies can quickly mend potential
interpersonal rifts that may otherwise linger.
We also asked parents why they viewed apology
prompts as important for their children. In the case of moral transgressions,
parents saw these prompts as tools for helping children take responsibility. In
addition, they used apology prompts for promoting empathy, teaching about harm,
helping others feel better, and clearing up confusing situations.
However, not all parents viewed the
importance of apology prompting in the same way. There was a subset of parents
who were relatively permissive: warm and caring but not overly inclined to provide
discipline or expect mature behavior from their children.
Most of these parents were not wholly
dismissive of the importance of apologies, but they consistently indicated
being less likely to provide prompting to their children, compared to the other
parents in the study.
Overall, most parents in our study viewed
apologies as important in the lives of children. And the child development
research described above indicates that many children share this view.
But are there more and less effective ways to
prompt a child to apologize? I argue that parents should consider whether a
child will offer a prompted apology willingly and sincerely. A recently
completed study sheds some light on why.
In this study—currently under review—we asked
four- to nine-year-old children to evaluate two types of apologies that were
prompted by an adult. One apology was willingly given to the victim after the
apology prompt; the other apology was given only after additional adult
coercion (“You need to say you’re sorry!”).
We found that 90 percent of the children
viewed the recipient of the prompted, “willingly given” apology as feeling better.
However, only 22 percent of the children connected a coerced apology to
improved feelings in the victim.
So, as parents ponder the merits of prompting
apologies from children, it seems important to refrain from pushing one’s child
to apologize when he or she is not ready, or is simply not remorseful. Most
young children don’t view coerced apologies as effective.
In such cases, interventions aimed at calming
down, increasing empathy, and making amends may be more constructive than
pushing a resistant child to deliver an apology. And, of course, components
like making amends can accompany willingly given apologies as well.
Finally, to arguments that apologies are
merely empty words that
young children parrot, it’s worth noting that we have many rituals
that involve rather scripted verbal exchanges, such as when two people in love
say “I do” at a wedding or commitment ceremony.
Just as these scripted words carry deep
cultural and personal meaning, so too can other culturally valued verbal
scripts, such the words in an apology. Thoughtfully teaching young children
about apologizing is one aspect of teaching them how to be caring and well-regarded
members of their communities.
This article was originally published
on The Conversation
By Craig Smith
http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/should_you_ask_your_children_to_apologize
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