4.6 Article

Examining children's questions and parents' responses about COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey

Journal

CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12144-022-03331-4

Keywords

Child question-asking behavior; Parents' explanations; Conceptual development; COVID-19 pandemic; Sociocultural context

Funding

  1. Nuh Naci Yazgan University Scientific Projects Support Program [2020-SO-BP/1]

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The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on children's lives. This study examines children's questions about the coronavirus and how parents respond to these questions. The findings show that children are curious about the nature of the virus and the changes in their lifestyle. Older children are more concerned about school and work. Parents usually provide realistic explanations and reassurance when answering children's questions.
COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on both adults' and children's everyday lives. Conversations about biological processes such as viruses, illness, and health have started to occur more frequently in daily interactions. Although there are many guidelines for parents about how to talk to their children about the coronavirus, only a few studies have examined what children are curious about the coronavirus and how they make sense of the changes in their everyday lives. This study addresses this need by examining children's questions and parents' responses about the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Turkish sociocultural context. Using an online survey, we asked 184 parents of 3- to 12-year-olds to report their children's questions about coronavirus and their answers to these questions. We analyzed children's questions and parents' responses using qualitative and quantitative analyses (Menendez et al., 2021). Children's questions were mainly about the nature of the virus (34%), followed by lifestyle changes (20%). Older children were more likely to ask about school/work and less likely to ask about lifestyle changes than younger children. Parents responded to children's questions by providing realistic explanations (48%) and reassurance (20%). Only 18% of children's questions were explanation-seeking why and how questions. Parents were more likely to provide explanations if children's questions were explanation-seeking. Family activities such as playing games and cooking were the most common coping strategies reported by parents (69.2%). The findings have important implications for children's learning about the coronavirus and how adults can support children's learning and help them develop coping strategies in different sociocultural contexts.

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