Answer:
Not harmed
Explanation:
At the same time personal adjustment is not harmed in Chinese American children.
Children who have difficulty reading other children's social cues are thought to benefit from all of these things.
These children can benefit from watching others interact successfully, watching social interactions on videotape, and w<span>atching puppets work out social situations. All of these will help them learn how to interpret other people's social cues and how to behave in a given situation, by taking a look at these social 'scripts.'</span>
Answer:
The view of aging and the treatment of people in late adulthood in Asian cultures tends to be more positive than in Western cultures.
Explanation:
Asian cultures tend to <em>value their elders</em> more than Western cultures. Western cultures tend to be more ageist, meaning they tend to be more discriminative towards its elders.
Asian cultures have <em>more respect </em>and they view this as one of the <em>highest virtues</em>, mainly deriving from Confucian tradition.
On the other hand, Western cultures tend to only <em>focus on its youth</em>, putting the elders aside and <em>devaluating it. </em>