| Literature DB >> 35010539 |
Hannah G Calvert1, Hannah G Lane2, Michaela McQuilkin1, Julianne A Wenner3, Lindsey Turner1.
Abstract
During spring of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic and accompanying public health advisories forced K-12 schools throughout the United States to suspend in-person instruction. School personnel rapidly transitioned to remote provision of academic instruction and wellness services such as school meals and counseling services. The aim of this study was to investigate how schools responded to the transition to remote supports, including assessment of what readiness characteristics schools leveraged or developed to facilitate those transitions. Semi-structured interviews informed by school wellness implementation literature were conducted in the spring of 2020. Personnel (n = 50) from 39 urban and rural elementary schools nationwide participated. The readiness = motivation capacity2 (R = MC2) heuristic, developed by Scaccia and colleagues, guided coding to determine themes related to schools' readiness to support student wellness in innovative ways during the pandemic closure. Two distinct code sets emerged, defined according to the R = MC2 heuristic (1) Innovations: roles that schools took on during the pandemic response, and (2) Readiness: factors influencing schools' motivation and capacity to carry out those roles. Schools demonstrated unprecedented capacity and motivation to provide crucial wellness support to students and families early in the COVID-19 pandemic. These efforts can inform future resource allocation and new strategies to implement school wellness practices when schools resume normal operations.Entities:
Keywords: capacity; digital divide; education; health; organizational readiness
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35010539 PMCID: PMC8750629 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19010279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of public elementary schools and interview participants.
| Variable | Number | % |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Student race/ethnicity | ||
| ≥50% Asian | 1 | 2.6 |
| ≥50% Black | 3 | 7.7 |
| ≥50% Hispanic | 5 | 12.8 |
| ≥50% White | 19 | 48.7 |
| Other | 11 | 28.2 |
| Socioeconomic status (% of students eligible for free/reduced-priced meals) | ||
| Higher (<33%) | 8 | 20.5 |
| Middle (≥33% to <66%) | 16 | 41.0 |
| Lower (≥66%) | 12 | 30.8 |
| Not reported | 3 | 7.7 |
| School locale | ||
| City: Large | 6 | 15.4 |
| City: Mid-size | 4 | 10.3 |
| City: Small | 9 | 23.1 |
| Rural: Fringe | 9 | 23.1 |
| Rural: Distant | 9 | 23.1 |
| Rural: Remote | 2 | 5.0 |
| School size (number of students enrolled) | ||
| >650 | 9 | 23.1 |
| 450 to 649 | 9 | 23.1 |
| 250 to 449 | 12 | 30.7 |
| <249 | 9 | 23.1 |
| Region | ||
| West | 8 | 20.5 |
| Midwest | 10 | 25.7 |
| South | 13 | 33.3 |
| Northeast | 8 | 20.5 |
|
| ||
| Role at School | ||
| Administrator (Principal/Assistant Principal/Head of School) | 20 | 40.0 |
| Physical Education Teacher | 9 | 18.0 |
| Classroom Teacher | 2 | 4.0 |
| Counselor | 3 | 6.0 |
| Nurse | 2 | 4.0 |
| Administrative Assistant/Office Manager | 7 | 14.0 |
| Other | 7 | 14.0 |
| Gender (self-reported) | ||
| Female | 40 | 80.0 |
| Male | 10 | 20.0 |
Codebook definitions and themes for schools’ readiness to implement a wellness network of support.
| R = MC2 Construct and Definition | Theme(s) |
|---|---|
| Motivation/Momentum | |
| Few excerpts emerged; no themes were identified | |
|
| |
|
| |
| Intra-organizational relationships had extensive overlap with process capacities/internal operations; few unique excerpts emerged; no additional themes were identified | |
Note: Constructs of Relative Advantage and Innovativeness were not assessed due to the pandemic forcing decision making regarding adoption. Additionally, Simplicity and Compatibility constructs were combined into one construct, and all Culture and Climate constructs were combined into one construct. Schools used a variety of informal methods to monitor and adjust their processes, including constant communication with families through broad surveys and individual calls/emails/home visits, and observing bus routes. There were frequent changes, particularly in meal service processes, intended to either better reach students (e.g., expanding bus delivery route or locating new sites near public transportation stops) or improve operations and prevent virus spread (e.g., reducing routes, serving multiple meals/day on fewer days).
Figure 1Components of schools’ network of support. Note. Bubbles with darker shading reflect a higher frequency of mentions by participants.
Contrasting themes between rural and urban schools for capacity constructs.
| Theme(s) | Representative Quote(s) |
|---|---|
| “Luckily we’re a smaller school, smaller staff. We all work well together anyways. So I think that was a positive for us.”—Rural Physical Education Teacher | |
| “I only have one student that’s getting online with me and my team teachers only have 4 students out of our 27. So we’re copying out lesson plans that we’re making. And they’re being placed at the little grocery store that’s in the nearby town, and parents are asked to go to that grocery store and pick up the lesson plans for their students.”—Rural Classroom Teacher | |
| “One of my volunteers that attends the local Christian church stepped up, talked with her minister, and we did some of the packing of the bags in the church basement. So this has been a blessing…we have excellent community, and they are such caring people.”—Rural School Nurse |