Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
New York Hall of Science, New York, NY, USA.
Dev Sci. 2021 May;24(3):e13057. doi: 10.1111/desc.13057. Epub 2020 Nov 20.
Play is critical for children's learning, but there is significant disagreement over whether and how parents should guide children's play. The objective of the current study was to examine how parent-child interaction affected children's engagement and problem-solving behaviors when challenged with similar tasks. Parents and 4- to 7-year-old children in the U.S. (N = 111 dyads) played together at an interactive electric circuit exhibit in a children's museum. We examined how parents and children set and accomplished goals while playing with the exhibit materials. Children then participated in a set of challenges that involved completing increasingly difficult circuits. Children whose parents set goals for their interactions showed less engagement with the challenge task (choosing to attempt fewer challenges), and children whose parents were more active in completing the circuits while families played with the exhibit subsequently completed fewer challenges on their own. We discuss these results in light of broader findings on the role of parent-child interaction in museum settings.
游戏对儿童的学习至关重要,但对于父母是否应该以及如何引导孩子的游戏存在重大分歧。本研究的目的是考察亲子互动如何影响儿童在面临类似任务时的参与度和解决问题的行为。来自美国的父母和 4 至 7 岁的儿童(N=111 对)在儿童博物馆的互动电路展览中一起玩耍。我们研究了父母和孩子在使用展品材料时如何设定和实现目标。之后,孩子们参与了一系列挑战,包括完成越来越难的电路。那些父母为互动设定目标的孩子在挑战任务中表现出较低的参与度(选择尝试较少的挑战),而那些父母在与展品互动时更积极地完成电路的孩子在独自完成挑战时完成的挑战更少。我们根据在博物馆环境中亲子互动作用的更广泛研究结果来讨论这些结果。