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A Preliminary Examination of Key Strategies, Challenges, and Benefits of Remote Learning Expressed by Parents during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors :
Roy, Amy K.
Breaux, Rosanna
Sciberras, Emma
Patel, Pooja
Ferrara, Erica
Shroff, Delshad M.
Cash, Annah R.
Dvorsky, Melissa R.
Langberg, Joshua M.
Quach, Jon
Melvin, Glenn
Jackson, Anna
Becker, Stephen P.
Source :
School Psychology. Mar 2022 37(2):147-159.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Among the many impacts of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, one of the most dramatic was the immediate closure of in-person schooling in March/April 2020 when parents were faced with much greater responsibility in supporting their children's learning. Despite this, few studies have examined parents' own perspectives of this experience. The aims of this preliminary study were to: (1) identify challenges, benefits, and useful strategies related to remote learning; and (2) examine differences in findings across two countries, between parents of youth with and without attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and between parents of children and adolescents. To address these aims, parent responses to open-ended questions on the Home Adjustment to COVID-19 Scale (HACS; Becker, Breaux, et al., 2020) were examined across three studies conducted in the United States and Australia (N = 606, children: 68.5% male, ages 6-17 years). The challenges most frequently expressed by parents included the child's difficulty staying on task (23.8% of parents), lack of motivation (18.3%), remote learning factors (17.8%), and lack of social interaction (14.4%). The most frequently expressed strategy related to using routines and schedules (58.2%) and the biggest benefit was more family time (20.3%). Findings were largely consistent across countries, ADHD status, and age, with a few notable group differences. Given that the most common challenges involved child- (e.g., difficulties with staying on task and motivation), parent- (e.g., balancing remote learning with work responsibilities), and school- (e.g., remote instruction difficulties) related factors, there is a need for improved support across these systems going forward.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2578-4218
Volume :
37
Issue :
2
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
School Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1329233
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/spq0000465