A Qualitative Study of Center Director, Teacher, and Parent Input for Delivering a Virtual Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation Model in the Aftermath of COVID-19

IF 2.3 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Sara M. St. George, Elizabeth Howe, Carolina Velasquez, Anais Iglesias, Tomilola T. Awojobi, Yaray Agosto, Alejandra Casas, Rebecca J. Bulotsky-Shearer, Jason F. Jent, Ruby A. Natale
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Abstract

Given disruptions to early care and education following the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to mitigate long-term impacts of the pandemic on child development among ethnic and racial minority children. Our team is implementing an early childhood mental health consultation (ECMHC) model, or a multi-tiered intervention to support young children’s social-emotional development, that utilizes mental health consultants to deliver a virtual toolkit to ethnically and racially diverse early care and education centers. Understanding the perspectives and ongoing needs of center directors, teachers, and parents is critical to intervention delivery. Between February and April 2023, 18 participants (n = 6 center directors, n = 6 teachers, n = 6 parents) across 12 early childcare centers completed individual interviews in English or Spanish. We used a rapid qualitative analysis to generate four themes related to participants’ perceived impact of COVID-19, including how it (1) exacerbated existing financial and administrative challenges, (2) increased their need for adaptability, (3) highlighted the importance of support for staff facing educational challenges during a public health emergency, and (4) highlighted the value of partnerships between parents and centers. We generated five additional themes specific to participants’ ongoing needs and suggestions, including (1) increased financial support, (2) outside behavioral support, (3) enhanced center staff self-care, (4) balancing in-person interaction with planned virtual delivery, and (5) use of existing smartphone applications for communication with parents. In addition to informing adaptations to our model, including expanding upon program pillars (e.g., expanding our safety planning pillar to include financial safety via linkages to community resources), these data may be used to inform the delivery of other ECMHC programs for diverse populations.

新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情后,中心主任、教师和家长在提供虚拟幼儿心理健康咨询模型中的投入的定性研究
鉴于2019冠状病毒病大流行对早期护理和教育造成的干扰,必须减轻疫情对少数民族儿童发展的长期影响。我们的团队正在实施一个早期儿童心理健康咨询(ECMHC)模型,或者是一个多层次的干预来支持幼儿的社会情感发展,利用心理健康顾问向不同民族和种族的早期护理和教育中心提供一个虚拟工具包。了解中心主任、教师和家长的观点和持续需求对干预措施的实施至关重要。在2023年2月至4月期间,来自12个早期托儿中心的18名参与者(n = 6名中心主任,n = 6名教师,n = 6名家长)用英语或西班牙语完成了个人访谈。我们使用快速定性分析,生成了与参与者感知的COVID-19影响相关的四个主题,包括它如何(1)加剧了现有的财务和行政挑战,(2)增加了他们对适应性的需求,(3)强调了在突发公共卫生事件中为面临教育挑战的员工提供支持的重要性,以及(4)强调了家长和中心之间伙伴关系的价值。针对参与者的持续需求和建议,我们生成了五个额外的主题,包括(1)增加财政支持,(2)外部行为支持,(3)增强中心工作人员的自我护理,(4)平衡面对面互动与计划的虚拟交付,以及(5)使用现有的智能手机应用程序与家长沟通。除了为适应我们的模式提供信息,包括扩大项目支柱(例如,通过与社区资源的联系,扩大我们的安全规划支柱,包括金融安全),这些数据还可用于为不同人群提供其他ECMHC项目的信息。
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来源期刊
Early Childhood Education Journal
Early Childhood Education Journal EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
14.80%
发文量
124
期刊介绍: Early Childhood Education Journal is a professional publication of original peer-reviewed articles that reflect exemplary practices in the field of contemporary early childhood education. Articles cover the social, physical, emotional, and intellectual development of children age birth through 8, analyzing issues, trends, and practices from an educational perspective. The journal publishes feature-length articles that skillfully blend 1) theory, research, and practice, 2) descriptions of outstanding early childhood programs worldwide, and 3) quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods research. Early Childhood Education Journal is of interest not only to classroom teachers, child care providers, college and university faculty, and administrators, but also to other professionals in psychology, health care, family relations, and social services dedicated to the care of young children. Areas of Emphasis: International studies; Educational programs in diverse settings; Early learning across multiple domains; Projects demonstrating inter-professional collaboration; Qualitative and quantitative research and case studies; Best practices in early childhood teacher education; Theory, research, and practice relating to professional development; Family, school, and community relationships; Investigations related to curriculum and instruction; Articles that link theory and best practices; Reviews of research with well-articulated connections to the field
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