新冠肺炎期间有特殊教育需求儿童家长的观点:自我效能和学校支持

Q4 Social Sciences Exceptionality Education International Pub Date : 2022-01-12 DOI:10.5206/eei.v31i1.14097
J. Whitley, Ian A. Matheson, Jacqueline Specht, Jeffrey MacCormack
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引用次数: 2

摘要

2020年春季,家长在支持家庭学习方面的作用急剧增加。由于新冠肺炎,加拿大大多数省份的学校都关闭了,远程教育选项也很快被开发出来,以确保学生继续接受教育。许多有特殊教育需求的学生通常受益于学校的一系列支持,他们开始依赖父母提供获得和参与远程学习的手段。通过一项在线调查,我们探讨了263名有特殊教育需求儿童的加拿大父母对他们的自我效能感和学校支持的看法。我们对三个因变量(学业支持、父母自我效能感和社会情感支持)中的每一个进行了多元线性回归分析;自变量包括学生年级水平、教育安置和疫情前学校提供的支持总数。调查结果表明,大多数父母从事远程学习,对自己支持孩子学习的能力缺乏信心。父母自我效能感与学校的社会情感支持有关,与学业支持无关。小学年级儿童的父母,以及在2019冠状病毒病之前从学校获得更多支持的儿童的父母报告称,他们在社会情感领域感觉得到了学校更好的支持。学校应该探索在教育工作者和家长之间建立强有力的合作关系的方法,并继续寻找在校内外支持家庭和学生的方法。疫情和学校大楼的关闭提醒我们,家长和学校之间的伙伴关系对所有相关人员的福祉至关重要。
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Perspectives of Parents of Children with Special Educational Needs: Self-Efficacy and School Supports During COVID-19
The role of parents in supporting at-home learning increased dramatically in the spring of 2020. Schools in most Canadian provinces closed physically due to COVID-19, and remote-learning options were quickly developed to ensure continued education for students. Many students with special educational needs, who typically benefit from a range of supports from school, became reliant on parents to provide means of access to and participation in remote learning. Using an online survey, we explored the perceptions of 263 Canadian parents of children with special education needs with regard to their self‑efficacy and supports from schools. We conducted multiple linear regression analyses for each of three dependent variables (academic supports, parent self‑efficacy, and social-emotional supports); independent variables included student grade level, education placement, and total school-provided supports prior to the pandemic. Findings indicated that most parents engaged in remote learning and lacked confidence in their ability to support the learning of their child. Parent self-efficacy was related to social-emotional supports from schools and not to academic supports. Parents of children in elementary grades, and of those who had received more supports from school prior to COVID‑19, reported feeling better supported in social-emotional areas by the school. Schools should explore ways of building strong collaborative relationships between educators and parents, as well as continuing to find ways of supporting families and students in both in- and out-of-school places. The pandemic, and school-building closures, have reminded us how partnerships between parents and schools are crucial for the well-being of all involved.  
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Exceptionality Education International
Exceptionality Education International Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.10
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0.00%
发文量
5
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