COVID-19 大流行期间高等教育的复原力:范围界定文献综述及其对循证决策的影响

Oksana Celbis , Mindel van de Laar , Louis Volante
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摘要

随着 COVID-19 大流行病的爆发,抗灾能力这一概念在高等教育文献中受到越来越多的关注。大流行病作为一种外部压力源,在 2020 年的封锁期影响了多个高等教育机构,当时大学不得不暂时关闭校内活动,转而采取在线应急措施。本综述旨在探讨在疫情初期的应急响应阶段,高等教育研究文献是如何将抗灾能力概念化的,以及早期文献中的概念和研究设计选择是如何形成旨在提高高等教育中个人和支持系统抗灾能力的政策建议的。因此,本文对学术界和政策相关文献中正在进行的讨论做出了贡献,即如何使大学作为组织和社区更好地做好准备,不仅在紧急大流行期间做出响应,而且在大流行后的高等教育环境中做出响应。我们发现,有关这一主题的第一波学术文献主要侧重于个人层面的抗灾能力,更多的是学生的抗灾能力,而不是教师和学术支持人员的抗灾能力。在我们的研究样本中,只有少数文章将抗逆力作为群体层面的概念进行了实证研究,即便如此,对这一概念的定义和操作方法也存在差异,因此几乎不可能对不同研究进行比较。我们还发现,根据概念的操作方法,某些形式的抗逆力可能会在无意中降低其他形式的抗逆力--如果抗逆力的概念不同,或者在不同的分析层面上进行操作,这种观点也会得到支持。文献中的支离破碎反映了对复原力这一概念的不同概念化和测量方法,这使得该领域的学术对话以及为支持政策的设计提出建议的过程变得更加复杂。最后,文章就有希望的进一步研究方向提出了若干建议,这些建议可以推动该领域的技术发展。
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Resilience in higher education during the COVID-19 pandemic: A scoping literature review with implications for evidence-informed policymaking
With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the construct of resilience has received growing attention in the higher education literature. The pandemic, acting as an external stressor, impacted multiple higher education settings in 2020 during the period of lockdowns, when universities had to temporarily close on-campus activities and shift to online emergency responses. The objective of this scoping review is to explore how resilience was conceptualized in the higher education research literature during the initial emergency response phase of the pandemic, and how conceptual and research design choices in this early body of literature shaped policy recommendations aimed at enhancing the resilience of individuals and support systems in higher education. This article, thus, contributes to the ongoing discussion in the academic and policy-relevant literature on how to better prepare universities as organizations and communities for a response not only during the emergency pandemic, but also beyond, in post-pandemic higher education settings. We find that the first wave of academic literature on the subject largely focused on resilience at the individual level, and more so on the resilience of students rather than the resilience of faculty and academic support staff. Resilience as a group-level construct was the focus of empirical study only in a few articles in our review sample, and even then, there were differences in the ways the concept was defined and operationalized, making comparisons between studies virtually impossible. We also found support for the argument that depending on the operationalization of the concept, some forms of resilience inadvertently may decrease other forms of resilience– either when resilience is conceptualized differently, or operationalized at a different level of analysis. The fragmentation in the literature reflecting different conceptualizations and measurements of resilience as a construct complicates the academic conversation in the field and the process of making recommendations for the design of support policies. In conclusion, the article makes several suggestions on promising lines of further research which can advance the state of art in the field.
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CiteScore
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69 days
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