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Thursday, January 19, 2023

Youth-led study reveals mental-health, social challenges of Covid

Teachers gathered as students ate at socially distanced tables in Medora Elementary School in Louisville on March 17, 2021, the day Jefferson County Public Schools re-opened for in-person learning with new Covid-19 procedures. (Photo by Jon Cherry/Getty Images)
By Sarah Ladd
Kentucky Lantern

A new study on how Kentucky’s youth have coped with Covid-19 reports mental-health challenges, negative views toward remote learning, and more.

The report was published Wednesday by the Kentucky Student Voice Team, a youth-led nonprofit with a goal of creating “more just, democratic Kentucky schools and communities as research, policy and advocacy partners.”

Researchers interviewed 50 Kentuckians and conducted a survey. It was analyzed by the Student Voice Team and University of Kentucky researchers.

They found that many students felt “heavily negative” about online learning. Students felt like their opinions did not matter enough to administrators. Youth experienced strained mental health during the pandemic. Finally, many reported they struggled with loss of social interactions and milestones.

They described “shock and grief at the loss of the social aspects of learning,” which ranged from jokes in a group project to prom. And, students praised their teachers for helping them cope.

Still, challenges brought on by the pandemic were relentless.

‘Give them options’

One student said they felt that in Zoom classes, a lack of requirement that cameras be on was a barrier to learning. Another said they needed better instruction and didn’t get much out of watching videos.

“Give them options,” the report quotes one student as saying. “That’s what I would have liked last year, that’s what I would have liked this year, and that’s what I would have liked or will like for every year that we’re dealing with something like this.”

Students expressed “almost universal frustration” with administrators, who they said made them feel like their opinions did not matter when they were difficult to reach.

One student described contradicting guidance on masking in schools from the principal and superintendent: “It was just very messy and everyone chose sides and it affected our education.”

Students described mental-health fallout from studying in the same place they slept. That caused at least one student to form an obsession with school. It was the one thing they could control, they told researchers.

The student said, “I would spend just hours at a time without going to the restroom or eating or anything, just working on schoolwork. And it was really unhealthy. And so that wasn’t necessarily just because of Covid. But I think it definitely did enable me to feed into those bad habits a lot more.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported last March that 37% of high-school students reported poor mental health in 2021. Additionally, 44% “reported they persistently felt sad or hopeless during the past year.”

The National Suicide Prevention and Crisis Lifeline is 988 – and anyone can call or text it for mental health help.

“Students almost felt ‘stranded’ in a sense where online schooling was not set up in a comprehensive way meant to stimulate learning,” said researcher Esha Bajwa. “Instead, it was mostly an afterthought to sending people home with many feeling that there was no real way of feeling connected and/or engaged with school.”

Researchers said the long-term effects of mental-health fallout should continue to be studied: “Whether the pandemic was the inciting event or merely an amplifier, its effects on mental health for students were devastating and deserve to be studied for years to come.”

Amid all the concerns, one student said, “But in the meantime, it's those small moments, those memories, that laugh, that joke, that little small project that you had with your classmates, that class project that we had, that is what makes school meaningful and important right now. It's those moments. It's those moments that make school what it is. It always has been.”
 
Policy and practice recommendations

Researchers made policy and practice recommendations for the future:
  • Prioritize students’ mental health by adapting workload and class structure.
  • Advocate for better awareness and access to mental health counselors.
  • Add mental health days, check-in surveys and mindfulness opportunities.
  • Allow for more transparency in understanding material and provide additional support for students, such as reviewing material and adding peer tutoring.
  • Demonstrate care for students’ vast and varied circumstances, including being aware of equity. Humanize the struggles during and after the pandemic.
  • Consider health precautions through a new perspective, clearly communicate exposures and accommodate those who are immunocompromised.
  • Actively seek to involve students in the decision-making processes by adding voting student members to school boards.
  • Implement equity-oriented positive reinforcement systems to celebrate student achievements and foster supportive school climates
  • Create an environment where students can connect with each other and teachers and prioritize social connection in the classroom.
  • Challenge the normative notion that a students’ value is tied to academic successes. Celebrate student achievements beyond a solely academic context. Also, diversify grading methods.
  • Utilize more interactive teaching practices and focus on group work.
The first part of the study came out in Spring 2020. It found, among other things, that students felt the meaningfulness and manageability of their schoolwork declined during the first semester of pandemic-induced remote learning.

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