在加拿大安大略省新冠肺炎第一波疫情期间,社区构成、幼儿园教育者报告的远程学习障碍和返校问题之间的关联。

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal of Population Data Science Pub Date : 2023-04-04 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.23889/ijpds.v7i4.1761
Natalie Spadafora, Jade Wang, Caroline Reid-Westoby, Magdalena Janus
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介:迄今为止的研究表明,新冠肺炎大流行并没有公平地影响到每个人。这种不公平的影响是否在教育上被视为教育工作者报告的远程学习障碍、担忧和心理健康,目前尚不清楚。目的:本研究的目的是探讨在加拿大安大略省第一波新冠肺炎相关学校关闭期间,学校和幼儿园教育者报告的障碍与儿童学习问题之间的社区构成之间的关系。方法:2020年春季,我们通过在线调查收集了安大略省幼儿园教育工作者(n=2569;74.2%的幼儿园教师,25.8%的幼儿教育工作者;97.6%的女性)的数据,询问他们在第一轮学校关闭期间在线学习的经历和挑战。我们根据学校的邮政编码将教育工作者的反应与2016年加拿大人口普查变量联系起来。使用双变量相关性和泊松回归分析来确定邻里构成与教育者心理健康之间是否存在关联,以及幼儿园教育者报告的障碍和担忧的数量。结果:在教育者心理健康和学校邻里特征方面没有显著的发现。在中等收入较低社区的学校任教的教育工作者报告说,在线学习存在更多障碍(例如,父母/监护人没有提交作业/提供孩子学习的最新情况),并对2020年秋季返校表示担忧(例如,学生对日常生活的调整)。与教育工作者报告的障碍或担忧以及任何其他人口普查邻里变量(单亲家庭比例、平均家庭规模、不会说官方语言的人口比例、新移民人口比例或0-4岁人口比例)没有显著关联,我们的研究表明,在新冠肺炎大流行期间,儿童学校所在地的社区构成并没有加剧幼儿园学生和教育工作者的潜在负面学习体验,尽管我们确实发现,在社会经济地位较低的社区教学的教育工作者报告称,在此期间,在线学习面临更多障碍。总之,我们的研究表明,补救工作应侧重于幼儿园儿童及其家庭,而不是学校所在地。
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Association between neighbourhood composition, kindergarten educator-reported distance learning barriers, and return to school concerns during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario, Canada.

Introduction: Research to date has established that the COVID-19 pandemic has not impacted everyone equitably. Whether this unequitable impact was seen educationally with regards to educator reported barriers to distance learning, concerns and mental health is less clear.

Objective: The objective of this study was to explore the association between the neighbourhood composition of the school and kindergarten educator-reported barriers and concerns regarding children's learning during the first wave of COVID-19 related school closures in Ontario, Canada.

Methods: In the spring of 2020, we collected data from Ontario kindergarten educators (n = 2569; 74.2% kindergarten teachers, 25.8% early childhood educators; 97.6% female) using an online survey asking them about their experiences and challenges with online learning during the first round of school closures. We linked the educator responses to 2016 Canadian Census variables based on schools' postal codes. Bivariate correlations and Poisson regression analyses were used to determine if there was an association between neighbourhood composition and educator mental health, and the number of barriers and concerns reported by kindergarten educators.

Results: There were no significant findings with educator mental health and school neighbourhood characteristics. Educators who taught at schools in neighbourhoods with lower median income reported a greater number of barriers to online learning (e.g., parents/guardians not submitting assignments/providing updates on their child's learning) and concerns regarding the return to school in the fall of 2020 (e.g., students' readjustment to routines). There were no significant associations with educator reported barriers or concerns and any of the other Census neighbourhood variables (proportion of lone parent families, average household size, proportion of population that do no speak official language, proportion of population that are recent immigrants, or proportion of population ages 0-4).

Conclusions: Overall, our study suggests that the neighbourhood composition of the children's school location did not exacerbate the potential negative learning experiences of kindergarten students and educators during the COVID-19 pandemic, although we did find that educators teaching in schools in lower-SES neighbourhoods reported more barriers to online learning during this time. Taken together, our study suggests that remediation efforts should be focused on individual kindergarten children and their families as opposed to school location.

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