Read the article and answer the questions that follow.
Is There Really a Generation Gap?
According to the results of a survey in USA WEEKEND Magazine, there isn’t really a generation gap. The magazine’s “Teens & Parents” survey shows that today’s generation of young people generally get along well with their parents and appreciate the way they’re being raised. Most feel that their parents understand them, and they believe their parents consider family as the No. 1 priority in their lives. Although more than a third of teens have something in their rooms they would like to keep secret from their parents, it is usually nothing more harmful than a diary or a CD.
Such results may seem surprising in the context of the violent events that people hear about in the media. Maybe because of the things they hear, parents worry that their own kids might get out of control once they reach the teenage years. However, the facts in the survey should make us feel better. The survey shows us that today’s teens are loving and sensible. They are certainly happier than the angry people in the teenage stereotypes we all know about. True, some teenagers are very angry, and we need to recognize their needs, but the great majority of teens are not like that at all.
In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids.
Is this spirit of harmony a change from the past? Only a generation ago, parent-child relations were described as the “generation gap”. Yet even then, things were not so bad. Most kids in the 1960s and 1970s shared their parents’ basic values.
Perhaps, however, it is true that American families are growing closer at the beginning of this new millennium. Perhaps there is less to fight about, and the dangers of drug abuse and other unacceptable behavior are now well known. Perhaps, compared to the impersonal world outside the home, a young person’s family is like a friendly shelter, not a prison. And perhaps parents are acting more like parents than they did 20 or 30 years ago.
What is the main subject of paragraph three?
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Lời giải:
Báo saiGiải thích: In contrast to some stereotypes, most teens believe they must be understanding about differences among individuals. Many of them volunteer for community service with disadvantaged people. When they talk about themselves, their friends and their families, they sound positive and proud. Generally, these are very nice kids. => Trái ngược với một số định kiến, hầu hết thanh thiếu niên tin rằng họ phải hiểu về sự khác biệt giữa các cá nhân. Nhiều người trong số họ tình nguyện phục vụ cộng đồng với những hoàn cảnh khó khăn. Khi họ nói về bản thân, bạn bè và gia đình của họ, họ có vẻ tích cực và tự hào. Nói chung, đây là những đứa trẻ rất tốt.
Tạm dịch: Chủ đề chính của đoạn 3 là gì?
A. Sự khác biệt giữa các thiếu niên.
B. Định kiến về thanh thiếu niên.
C. Thái độ tích cực của thiếu niên đối với người khác.
D. Tình nguyện vì những hoàn cảnh khó khăn.