Thursday, February 7, 2019
The Effects of Violence in Children Cartoons :: Psychology
Television is everywhere these days, not just in our living rooms but in bathrooms, kitchens, doctors offices, grocery stores, airplanes, and classrooms. We have annoy to TV virtually anywhere and as Americans we ar taking advantaged of it. Adults arent the lone(prenominal) ones stoping TV children today are watching more TV than ever out front. TV has even become known as Americas baby-sitter. (Krieg). centre that parents are now using the television as a commission of entertaining their children while they attempt to accomplish former(a) things such as cooking and cleaning. Most Americans would agree that children watch a lot of TV. Its mutual to see a child sitting in front of the TV on a Saturday morning with their Coco Pebbles watching their favorite superhero. This sounds blameless enough. However, many parents and teachers across the country are worried about the cartoons their children are watching. They feel that the cartoons have become too violent and are having veto long-term centers on children. It is common to see young boys feigning to shoot one another, while jumping on the couch and cover in closets as a sort of make-believe fort. But parents secernate that children are learning these behaviors from cartoons and imitating them. Others however, disagree, they say that violence in cartoons does not effect children and that children wishing this world of fantasy in their lives. They say that children would show these corresponding behaviors regardless of the content of the cartoons they watch. On average and American child exit watch 32 acts of violence per hour on TV. This number has skyrocketed from 20 years ago when it was just 12 acts per hour (Krieg). This being express a child will have watched anywhere from 8,000 to 100,000 acts of violence before they even finish elementary school (Weiss). While adults can watch violence on TV and understand that it is not real, children on the other hand have difficulty differe ntiating the between what is real and what is make believe. Those arguing that childrens cartoons are too violent say that these cartoons will greatly tint these childrens behaviors growing up. Violence is a learned behavior and therefore children need to see violence in order to become violence themselves (Krieg). If a child is viewing their favorite character hitting, kicking, and beating up the cock-a-hoop guys a child will learn these behaviors too.
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