Abstract
Using a new method for examining parental explanations in a laboratory setting, the prompted explanation task, this study examines how characteristics of parental explanations about biology relate to children’s knowledge. Parents (N = 148; M
age = 38; 84% female, 16% male; 67% having completed college) of children ages 7–10 (M
age = 8.92; 47% female, 53% male; 58% White, 9.5% Black, 9.5% Asian) provided answers to eight how and why questions about biology. Parents used a number of different approaches to address the questions, including providing more mechanistic responses to how questions and more teleological responses to why questions. The characteristics of parental explanations—most notably, how frequently parents provided correct responses—predicted children’s performance on measures of verbal intelligence and biological knowledge. Additional exploratory analyses and implications for children’s learning are discussed.