心理健康和远程学习研究的综合:大流行的悲伤如何困扰因果关系的主张

Stephanie Moore, G. Veletsianos, M. Barbour
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引用次数: 1

摘要

虽然关于在线和远程学习对心理健康和福祉的影响有很多争论,但对这一特定问题的研究还没有系统的综合或回顾。本文综述了国内外关于在线或远程学习与心理健康/幸福感关系的研究进展。我们的回顾显示,2020年之前几乎没有学术研究,大多数研究都是在COVID-19大流行期间进行的。我们报告了四个发现:(1)在大多数研究中,大流行效应没有得到很好的控制;(2)研究呈现出一幅非常复杂的图景,在如何衡量心理健康和福祉以及如何/是否对在线和远程学习作出因果推论方面存在差异;(3)有一些迹象表明,某些学生群体在在线环境中可能会遇到更多困难;(4)没有假设心理健康与网络之间存在直接关系的研究,为解决心理健康问题的混淆因素和可能的策略提供了最好的见解。我们的综述显示,关于这一主题的已发表的研究中,有75.5%要么犯了相关性不等于因果错误,要么在没有建立相关性的情况下仍断言存在因果关系。基于这项研究,我们建议研究人员、政策制定者、从业者和管理者在就在线/远程学习和心理健康的影响做出概括性断言时要格外谨慎。我们鼓励进一步研究,以更好地了解对特定学习者亚群的影响,以及对课程和机构层面支持心理健康的策略的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Synthesis of Research on Mental Health and Remote Learning: How Pandemic Grief Haunts Claims of Causality
While there has been a lot of debate over the impact of online and remote learning on mental health and well-being, there has been no systematic syntheses or reviews of the research on this particular issue. In this paper, we review the research on the relationship between mental health/well-being and online or remote learning. Our review shows that little scholarship existed prior to 2020 with most studies conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic. We report four findings: (1) pandemic effects are not well-controlled in most studies; (2) studies present a very mixed picture, with variability around how mental health and well-being are measured and how/whether any causal inferences are made in relation to online and remote learning, (3) there are some indications that certain populations of students may struggle more in an online context, and (4) research that does not assume a direct relationship between mental health and online provides the best insight into both confounding factors and possible strategies to address mental health concerns. Our review shows that 75.5% of published research on this topic either commits the correlation does not equal causation error or asserts a causal relationship even when it fails to establish correlations. Based on this study, we suggest that researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and administrators exercise extreme caution around making generalizable assertions with respect to the impacts of online/remote learning and mental health. We encourage further research to better understand effects on specific learner sub-populations and on course—and institution—level strategies to support mental health.
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