The Impact of Educator Anxiety and Anxiety Literacy on Primary Educators’ Responses to Anxious Children

IF 1.7 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Child & Youth Care Forum Pub Date : 2023-09-30 DOI:10.1007/s10566-023-09771-8
Jessica A. Byrne, Laura H. Clark
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Abstract

Abstract Background Parental anxiety and over-involved parenting behaviour are consistently associated with an increase in child anxiety symptoms. Primary school aged children also often develop a strong and influential relationship with their class teacher and how educators respond to anxiety therefore warrants investigation. Preliminary research has shown that educators use anxiety-promoting techniques, such as avoidance. However, there has been little empirical investigation of the factors that influence the management of anxious children by primary school educators in the classroom setting. Objective This study investigated the relationship between the anxiety literacy of primary school educators, anxiety symptoms experienced by primary school educators and the management of anxious children by primary school educators. Methods A total of 73 primary school educators in the United Kingdom completed an online survey. The survey measured participant anxiety and anxiety knowledge, as well as utilising vignettes of hypothetical scenarios to measure the use of anxiety-promoting and autonomy-promoting responses. Results Educator anxiety literacy predicted a reduced likelihood of using anxiety-promoting responses but did not predict increased use of autonomy-promoting responses. Educators’ anxiety was not found to predict anxiety-promoting or autonomy-promoting responses when managing anxious children. Conclusions The findings suggest that promoting anxiety literacy in primary educators may reduce the frequency with which educators use anxiety promoting responses with anxious students. The findings highlight the importance of further clarifying the quality and forms of anxiety mental health knowledge and training which educators receive. This type of data may be useful in developing ways to equip educators with the skills to respond and manage anxiety in the classroom.
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教育工作者焦虑与焦虑素养对小学教育工作者焦虑儿童反应的影响
背景:父母焦虑和过度参与的父母行为与儿童焦虑症状的增加一致相关。小学学龄儿童也经常与他们的班主任建立起牢固而有影响力的关系,因此教育者如何应对焦虑值得调查。初步研究表明,教育工作者会使用一些促进焦虑的技巧,比如回避。然而,对小学教育工作者在课堂环境中管理焦虑儿童的影响因素的实证调查却很少。目的探讨小学教育工作者的焦虑素养、小学教育工作者的焦虑症状与小学教育工作者对焦虑儿童的管理之间的关系。方法对英国73名小学教育工作者进行在线调查。该调查测量了参与者的焦虑和焦虑知识,并利用假设场景的小片段来测量焦虑促进和自主促进反应的使用。结果教育焦虑素养预测使用焦虑促进反应的可能性降低,但不预测使用自主促进反应的增加。在管理焦虑儿童时,教育工作者的焦虑并不能预测促进焦虑或促进自主的反应。结论提高小学教育工作者的焦虑素养可以降低教育工作者对焦虑学生使用焦虑促进反应的频率。研究结果强调了进一步澄清教育工作者所接受的焦虑心理健康知识和培训的质量和形式的重要性。这种类型的数据可能有助于开发方法,使教育工作者具备应对和管理课堂焦虑的技能。
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来源期刊
Child & Youth Care Forum
Child & Youth Care Forum PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: Child & Youth Care Forum is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary publication that welcomes submissions – original empirical research papers and theoretical reviews as well as invited commentaries – on children, youth, and families. Contributions to Child & Youth Care Forum are submitted by researchers, practitioners, and clinicians across the interrelated disciplines of child psychology, early childhood, education, medical anthropology, pediatrics, pediatric psychology, psychiatry, public policy, school/educational psychology, social work, and sociology as well as government agencies and corporate and nonprofit organizations that seek to advance current knowledge and practice. Child & Youth Care Forum publishes scientifically rigorous, empirical papers and theoretical reviews that have implications for child and adolescent mental health, psychosocial development, assessment, interventions, and services broadly defined. For example, papers may address issues of child and adolescent typical and/or atypical development through effective youth care assessment and intervention practices. In addition, papers may address strategies for helping youth overcome difficulties (e.g., mental health problems) or overcome adversity (e.g., traumatic stress, community violence) as well as all children actualize their potential (e.g., positive psychology goals). Assessment papers that advance knowledge as well as methodological papers with implications for child and youth research and care are also encouraged.
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