Why 'Pinocchio' May Not Teach Kids Honesty

Why 'Pinocchio' May Not Teach Kids Honesty
|
Open Image Modal

By: Kelly Dickerson, Staff Writer
Published: 07/28/2014 07:55 AM EDT on LiveScience

For parents looking to teach their children a lesson about honesty, a new study suggests "George Washington and the Cherry Tree" is a more useful morality tale than "The Boy Who Cried Wolf."

Stories touting the positive outcomes of telling the truth promoted more honesty in kids than stories that emphasize the grave consequences of lying, researchers found.

"We were very surprised by our results, because we thought the 'The Boy Who Cried Wolf' and 'Pinocchio' should do better based on the adult findings that negative messaging helps change adult behaviors," Kang Lee, the study's lead researcher from the University of Toronto, told Live Science in an email. [10 Scientific Tips for Raising Happy Kids]

The new research suggests the opposite is true for children.

Lee and colleagues recruited 268 kids between ages 3 and 7. The researchers told each child one of four stories: "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," "Pinocchio," "George Washington and the Cherry Tree," or, a control, the "The Tortoise and the Hare."

"Pinocchio" and "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" are actually dark tales: Pinocchio's nose grows every time he tells a lie, and the boy who cried wolf gets gobbled up by the wolf at the end of the tale after lying too many times. In contrast, George Washington is rewarded for coming clean about chopping down a cherry tree.

To test how honest the kids were after hearing one of the four stories, the researchers used a classic behavioral study game, in which the kids had to guess what kind of toy was hidden from sight based only on the noise it made. During the game, the children were left by themselves for one minute and told not to peek at the toy — such a tempting situation that most kids were expected to cheat.

The kids in this study were seated with their backs to a table where the toy was sitting. The first few times the researcher used a toy like a duck or a cat that made a characteristic quacking or meowing sound, respectively. Then, the scientist used a toy that only played a generic melody that the kids could not easily identify. The researcher left the room to go get one of the four storybooks and told each child not to peek at the toy. The kids were monitored with a hidden camera.

After returning to the room, the researcher read the story and asked, "What do you think? Is it OK to tell lies or not OK to tell lies?" Then the researcher asked each kid if they peeked at the toy or not.

About 74 percent of the kids peeked at the toy when the researcher left the room. Researchers expected that the kids who heard "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" would be the most honest, because of the fatal consequences lying has in the story. However, children who heard the George Washington story were three times more likely to tell the truth about peeking compared with children who heard the control story. Children who heard "Pinnochio" or "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" were just as likely to lie as children who heard the control story.

To figure out why, the researchers created a new version of the George Washington story in which George lies to his father about chopping down the cherry tree. His father later finds out the truth and tells George that he is very disappointed in him for lying. Children who heard the original, positive-outcome story were three times more likely to tell the truth than the children who heard the new, negative-outcome version.

Lee said the findings suggest that parents should talk to their kids about the positive outcomes of telling the truth, rather than the negative outcomes of lying.

Details of the experiment were published June 13 in the journal Psychological Science.

Follow Kelly Dickerson on Twitter. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. ]]>

Support HuffPost

At HuffPost, we believe that everyone needs high-quality journalism, but we understand that not everyone can afford to pay for expensive news subscriptions. That is why we are committed to providing deeply reported, carefully fact-checked news that is freely accessible to everyone.

Whether you come to HuffPost for updates on the 2024 presidential race, hard-hitting investigations into critical issues facing our country today, or trending stories that make you laugh, we appreciate you. The truth is, news costs money to produce, and we are proud that we have never put our stories behind an expensive paywall.

Would you join us to help keep our stories free for all? Your will go a long way.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

50 Children's Books with a Positive Message
(01 of49)
Open Image Modal
(02 of49)
Open Image Modal
"All I See Is Part of Me," by Chara M. Curtis
(03 of49)
Open Image Modal
"An Awesome Book!" by Dallas Clayton
(04 of49)
Open Image Modal
(05 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Beautiful Oops!" by Barney Saltzberg
(07 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Cookies: Bite-Size Life Lessons," by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, Jane Dyer
(08 of49)
Open Image Modal
(09 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Enemy Pie," by Derek Munson
(10 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Fancy Nancy Poet Extraordinaire," by Jane O'Connor, Robin Preiss Glasser
(11 of49)
Open Image Modal
(12 of49)
Open Image Modal
(13 of49)
Open Image Modal
"I Think, I Am!" by Louise L. Hay
(14 of49)
Open Image Modal
(15 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Iggy Peck Architect," by Andrea Beaty
(17 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Ish," by Peter H. Reynolds
(18 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Limu: The Blue Turtle," by Kimo Armitage
(19 of49)
Open Image Modal
(20 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Little Pea," by Amy Krouse Rosenthal
(21 of49)
Open Image Modal
"LMNO Peas," by Keith Baker
(22 of49)
Open Image Modal
(23 of49)
Open Image Modal
(24 of49)
Open Image Modal
(25 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Not a Box," by Antoinette Portis
(26 of49)
Open Image Modal
(27 of49)
Open Image Modal
(28 of49)
Open Image Modal
"One," by Kathryn Otoshi
(29 of49)
Open Image Modal
"One Love," by Cedella Marley
(30 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Only One You," by Linda Kranz
(31 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Peaceful Piggy Meditation," by Kerry Lee Maclean
(32 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Press Here," by Herve Tullet
(34 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Thank You, World," by Alice McGinty
(35 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Dot," by Peter Reynolds
(36 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Gift of Nothing," by Patrick McDonnell
(37 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Giving Tree," by Shel Silverstein
(38 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Kissing Hand," by Audrey Penn
(39 of49)
Open Image Modal
(40 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Lorax," by Dr. Seuss
(41 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The North Star," by Peter H. Reynolds
(42 of49)
Open Image Modal
(43 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Very Fairy Princess," by Julie Andrews & Emma Walton Hamilton
(44 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Weaver," by Thacher Hurd & Elisa Kleven
(45 of49)
Open Image Modal
"The Yellow Tutu," by Kirsten Bramsen
(46 of49)
Open Image Modal
"We are all Born Free," by Amnesty International
(47 of49)
Open Image Modal
"You Be You," by Linda Kranz
(48 of49)
Open Image Modal
(49 of49)
Open Image Modal
"Zen Shorts," by Jon J. Muth

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE