Student mental health since COVID-19 and teachers' use of culturally relevant and emotionally supportive practices.

IF 1.8 School psychology (Washington, D.C.) Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-12 DOI:10.1037/spq0000675
Diane J Lee, Erika A Patall, Amanda Vite, Jeanette Zambrano
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Abstract

The rising social unrest regarding social justice issues across the nation, as well as health concerns and isolation as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, brought about a time of unprecedented distress for students across the United States. As schools transitioned back to in-person instruction, teachers may have utilized different strategies in the classroom to help support student mental health during this time of crisis. In the present study, we surveyed a sample of 1,449 full-time K-12 teachers during the Spring 2022 semester to examine the relationships between their perceptions of student mental health decline and their use of emotionally supportive and culturally relevant practices. We examined whether these relationships differed depending on whether students spoke a foreign language at home and the racial background of the students in the class. Structural equation modeling results revealed that teachers' perceptions of student mental health decline were associated with greater use of emotionally supportive, but not culturally relevant, strategies. The relationship between teachers' perceptions of student mental health decline and use of both types of strategies were stronger in classrooms with 50% or more students who spoke a foreign language at home, but not as a function of the proportion of Black, Indigenous, and people of color students in class. Results highlight teachers' responsive use of emotional support, and use of both emotionally supportive and culturally relevant strategies to support the mental health of students from non-English-speaking households. However, findings point to the need for teachers to utilize more culturally relevant strategies in times of crisis, particularly in classrooms with more Black, Indigenous, and people of color students. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

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自2019冠状病毒病以来的学生心理健康状况以及教师使用与文化相关和情感支持的做法。
全美各地因社会正义问题而引发的社会动荡,以及 COVID-19 大流行病造成的健康问题和隔离,给全美各地的学生带来了前所未有的困扰。随着学校重新过渡到面对面教学,教师可能会在课堂上采用不同的策略,以帮助学生在这一危机时期保持心理健康。在本研究中,我们在 2022 年春季学期对 1,449 名 K-12 全职教师进行了抽样调查,以研究他们对学生心理健康下降的看法与他们使用情感支持和文化相关实践之间的关系。我们研究了这些关系是否因学生在家是否讲外语以及班级学生的种族背景而有所不同。结构方程建模结果显示,教师对学生心理健康状况下降的看法与更多使用情感支持策略有关,但与文化相关策略无关。在有 50% 或更多学生在家中讲外语的班级中,教师对学生心理健康状况下降的看法与这两类策略的使用之间的关系更为密切,但与班级中黑人、土著和有色人种学生的比例无关。研究结果凸显了教师对情感支持的回应性使用,以及对情感支持和文化相关策略的使用,以支持来自非英语家庭的学生的心理健康。然而,研究结果表明,教师需要在危机时刻采用更多与文化相关的策略,尤其是在黑人、土著和有色人种学生较多的课堂上。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
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