COVID-19 and Student Well-Being: Stress and Mental Health during Return-to-School.

IF 3.3 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL
Canadian Journal of School Psychology Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-18 DOI:10.1177/08295735211001653
Kelly Dean Schwartz, Deinera Exner-Cortens, Carly A McMorris, Erica Makarenko, Paul Arnold, Marisa Van Bavel, Sarah Williams, Rachel Canfield
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Students have been multiply impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic: threats to their own and their family's health, the closure of schools, and pivoting to online learning in March 2020, a long summer of physical distancing, and then the challenge of returning to school in fall 2020. As damaging as the physical health effects of a global pandemic are, much has been speculated about the "second wave" of mental health crises, particularly for school-aged children and adolescents. Yet, few studies have asked students about their experiences during the pandemic. The present study engaged with over two thousand (N = 2,310; 1,288 female; M age = 14.5) 12- to 18-year-old Alberta students during their first few weeks of return-to-school in fall 2020. Students completed an online survey that asked about their perceptions of COVID-19, their fall return-to-school experiences (84.9% returned in-person), their self-reported pandemic-related stress, and their behavior, affect, and cognitive functioning in the first few weeks of September. The majority of students (84.9%) returned to school in person. Students reported moderate and equal concern for their health, family confinement, and maintaining social contact. Student stress levels were also above critical thresholds for 25% of the sample, and females and older adolescents (age 15-18 years) generally reported higher stress indicators as compared to males and younger (age 12-14 years) adolescents. Multivariate analysis showed that stress indicators were positively and significantly correlated with self-reported behavioral concerns (i.e., conduct problems, negative affect, and cognitive/inattention), and that stress arousal (e.g., sleep problems, hypervigilance) accounted for significant variance in behavioral concerns. Results are discussed in the context of how schools can provide both universal responses to students during COVID-19 knowing that most students are coping well, while some may require more targeted strategies to address stress arousal and heightened negative affect.

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COVID-19 与学生福祉:返校期间的压力和心理健康。
学生们受到了 COVID-19 大流行病的多重影响:自身及其家人的健康受到威胁、学校关闭、2020 年 3 月转入在线学习、漫长的暑期身体疏远,以及 2020 年秋季返校的挑战。与全球大流行病对身体健康造成的损害一样,人们对 "第二波 "心理健康危机也有很多猜测,尤其是对学龄儿童和青少年而言。然而,很少有研究询问学生在大流行期间的经历。本研究在 2020 年秋季阿尔伯塔省 12 至 18 岁学生返校后的头几周内,与两千多名学生(人数=2310;女性 1288;中年=14.5)进行了接触。学生们完成了一项在线调查,调查内容包括他们对 COVID-19 的看法、他们的秋季返校经历(84.9% 的学生亲自返校)、他们自我报告的与大流行病相关的压力,以及他们在 9 月份头几周的行为、情绪和认知功能。大多数学生(84.9%)亲自返回学校。学生们对自己的健康、与家人的联系以及与社会的保持联系表示了适度和同等的关注。在 25% 的样本中,学生的压力水平也超过了临界值,与男性和年龄较小(12-14 岁)的青少年相比,女性和年龄较大(15-18 岁)的青少年的压力指标普遍较高。多变量分析表明,压力指标与自我报告的行为问题(即行为问题、消极情绪和认知/注意力不集中)呈显著正相关,压力唤醒(如睡眠问题、过度警觉)在行为问题中占显著差异。讨论结果的背景是学校如何在 COVID-19 期间为学生提供普遍的应对措施,因为学校知道大多数学生都能很好地应对,而有些学生可能需要更有针对性的策略来解决压力唤醒和消极情绪增加的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of School Psychology
Canadian Journal of School Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journals of School Psychology (CJSP) is the official journal of the Canadian Association of School Psychologists and publishes papers focusing on the interface between psychology and education. Papers may reflect theory, research, and practice of psychology in education, as well as book and test reviews. The journal is aimed at practitioners, but is subscribed to by university libraries and individuals (i.e. psychologists). CJSP has become the major reference for practicing school psychologists and students in graduate educational and school psychology programs in Canada.
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