THE SHORT AND LONG-TERM IMPACT OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON CHILDREN IN EARLY CHILDHOOD AND THE RESTORATIVE POTENTIAL OF COMMUNICATION AND CREATIVITY
1 National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Educational Technology (CNR-ITD) (ITALY)
2 Teachergaming LLC (FINLAND)
3 VIA University College (DENMARK)
4 Breda University of Applied Sciences (NETHERLANDS)
5 Camera-etc (BELGIUM)
About this paper:
Conference name: 16th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation
Dates: 13-15 November, 2023
Location: Seville, Spain
Abstract:
The paper discusses the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic had on children in early childhood and whether and how educators and psychologists relied on communication and creativity to help children cope. The literature reports that measures put in place to contain the spread of COVID-19 had a significant impact on children's lives: changes in school and family life and restrictions experienced in interactions with adults and peers affected children's emotional and behavioral conditions and learning outcomes (OECD, 2021). This research work was conducted in the framework of the ALT-ER 2.0 project and investigates whether these measures may have had short and long-term impacts on children and how educators and psychologists helped children in dealing with this experience. Our study followed a qualitative approach; indeed, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 7 teachers working in kindergartens and elementary schools and with 3 developmental psychologists from Italy and Finland about difficulties during the lockdown and possible lasting effects on mental health, well-being and learning. In addition, we asked what tools teachers used to support communication with children about the pandemic during remote education and back to school, and whether they used creativity in their work, again with a specific focus on the pandemic. Interviews transcriptions were analyzed using thematic analysis; this bottom-up approach allowed us to identify several themes that will be presented in the paper. Notwithstanding differences in the measures taken in the two countries to limit the spread of the virus, almost all respondents identified effects on children's well-being and learning. Social isolation was cited as a condition that impacted children's emotions and social skills, and the interruption of regular school attendance particularly affected the learning of the most vulnerable children. Communication was considered important to help children especially at the time of re-entry when face-to-face interactions gave them the opportunity to disclose their emotions and talk about the situation. Creativity has been cited as an important part of educational and therapeutic work in general and, specifically, useful in finding new ways to interact with children at a distance, although distance itself has been experienced by some interviewees as limiting in this respect.
References:
[1] OECD (2021) Securing the recovery, ambition, and resilience for the well-being of children in the post-COVID-19 decade. OECD Publishing, Paris.Keywords:
Early Childhood Education, COVID-19, Creativity, Qualitative methods.