Library/PT 115/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Fairy tales speak to both parents and children, but most adults read them as moral lessons for kids. Bruno Bettelheim, for example, sees Hansel and Gretel as teaching children to grow up and stop being greedy, and he often interprets stories to make children look bad and parents look innocent. The author argues this ignores real cases when parents are selfish or abusive and notes that newer research questions Bettelheim’s view. Overall, society tends to deny adult wrongdoing and turn children’s stories into tools for teaching behavior instead of simply allowing playful enjoyment.

Logic Breakdown

Locate Bettelheim's explicit claims about Hansel and Gretel and infer what he thinks children can become. Key supporting lines: "children who learn to give up their unhealthy dependency on their parents" and "Thus, says Bettelheim, does the story train its young listeners to become \"mature children.\""

Passage Stimulus

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15.

It can be inferred from the passage that Bettelheim believes that children are

Correct Answer
D
"For example, ... for psychologist Bruno Bettelheim the tale is really about children who learn to give up their unhealthy dependency on their parents." And: "Thus, says Bettelheim, does the story train its young listeners to become \"mature children.\"" These explicit statements show Bettelheim believes the tale teaches children to abandon undesirable traits (dependency/greed) and become mature—i.e., capable of shedding undesirable personal qualities.
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