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Ms Maynes is full of praise for Hannah’s teachers who have gone “above and beyond”, helping Hannah fix an early problem with her pencil grip, for example.
And while the challenge of juggling work with learning supervision duties – and keeping a child focused during yet another Zoom session – has been manageable, it has not always been rewarding.
“The year has been really disappointing for a first year of school and we have definitely worried, my husband and me, that we’re not putting in enough time; there is a thing called remote learning guilt,” she said.
The results of a recent survey about remote learning suggest Hannah’s parents have plenty of company regarding their concerns about the lockdown’s effect on their child’s social development.
According to the national survey of 5048 parents, including 1398 Victorian respondents, 44 per cent of Victorian parents of school-aged children have worried about this, while 39 per cent feared their children have not got enough physical activity in lockdown.
The Real Insurance survey also found a high degree of parental concern about children’s mental health, with 54.5 per cent of respondents of the view that remote schooling had had a negative effect, although one-third of those said the effect was short-lived.
Ms Maynes said she and Hannah had got into a better groove with remote learning during the second phase of lockdown.
“Keeping her engaged and focused with online learning has been hard,” she said. “But we’ve got better at that and the school has got better at that; we’ve worked out mornings are best and afternoons aren’t.”
Ms Maynes said she accepted the news on the weekend that a return to face-to-face learning had been delayed until the second week of term four with weary resignation.
“I’m trying to keep myself off social media because I think if I look into all of that it would just get me upset,” she said.
Dr Emily Berger, a lecturer in educational psychology with Monash University’s Faculty of Education, said children’s mental health in lockdown could often be affected by the mental health of others in their family.
“We know the mental health of parents and teachers has been impacted by the pandemic and that the poor mental health of parents during outbreaks can result in poor mental health outcomes in children,” Dr Berger said.
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However, overseas research had shown the wellbeing of both adults and children had bounced back once the pandemic lockdowns ended.
“People might have depression or depression symptoms during a pandemic but those depressive symptoms become better, so there is a hopeful message there that mental health does improve,” Dr Berger said.
“The question is around high-risk groups that may have a history of mental illness or a history of adversity in their lives,” she said. “Maybe the consequences of the pandemic will continue on because they have lost employment or stability in their lives.”
Adam Carey is Education Editor. He joined The Age in 2007 and has previously covered state politics, transport, general news, the arts and food.
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