Department of General Medicine, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia; Centre for International Child Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia;
Department of Pediatrics, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada; Division of Developmental Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; and.
Pediatrics. 2016 Jun;137(6). doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-3994.
Learning problems are common, affecting up to 1 in 10 children. Refugee children may have cumulative risk for educational disadvantage, but there is limited information on learning in this population.
To review the evidence on educational outcomes and learning problems in refugee children and to describe their major risk and resource factors.
Medline, Embase, PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, PsycINFO, and Education Resources Information Center.
English-language articles addressing the prevalence and determinants of learning problems in refugee children.
Data were extracted and analyzed according to Arksey and O'Malley's descriptive analytical method for scoping studies.
Thirty-four studies were included. Refugee youth had similar secondary school outcomes to their native-born peers; there were no data on preschool or primary school outcomes. There were limited prevalence data on learning problems, with single studies informing most estimates and no studies examining specific language disorders or autism spectrum disorders. Major risk factors for learning problems included parental misunderstandings about educational styles and expectations, teacher stereotyping and low expectations, bullying and racial discrimination, premigration and postmigration trauma, and forced detention. Major resource factors for success included high academic and life ambition, "gift-and-sacrifice" motivational narratives, parental involvement in education, family cohesion and supportive home environment, accurate educational assessment and grade placement, teacher understanding of linguistic and cultural heritage, culturally appropriate school transition, supportive peer relationships, and successful acculturation.
Studies are not generalizable to other cohorts.
This review provides a summary of published prevalence estimates for learning problems in resettled refugee children, highlights key risk and resource factors, and identifies gaps in research.
学习问题较为常见,约每 10 名儿童中就有 1 名受到影响。难民儿童在教育方面可能面临诸多不利因素的累积风险,但针对该人群的学习问题,相关信息有限。
综述难民儿童的教育成果和学习问题方面的证据,并描述影响其学习的主要风险和资源因素。
Medline、Embase、PubMed、护理学和相关健康学科累积索引、PsycINFO 和教育资源信息中心。
探讨难民儿童学习问题发生率和决定因素的英语文献。
根据概述性研究的 Arksey 和 O'Malley 描述性分析方法提取和分析数据。
共纳入 34 项研究。难民青少年的中学教育成果与本土同龄人相似;但尚缺乏学前或小学教育成果的数据。学习问题的发生率数据有限,大多数估计值由单项研究提供,且没有研究专门探讨特定的语言障碍或自闭症谱系障碍。学习问题的主要风险因素包括父母对教育方式和期望的误解、教师刻板印象和低期望、欺凌和种族歧视、迁徙前和迁徙后创伤以及被迫拘留。成功的主要资源因素包括高学业和生活抱负、“天赋与牺牲”的激励性叙事、父母对教育的参与、家庭凝聚力和支持性家庭环境、准确的教育评估和年级安置、教师对语言和文化传统的理解、文化适宜的学校过渡、支持性的同伴关系以及成功的文化适应。
研究结果无法推广至其他群体。
本综述概述了重新安置难民儿童学习问题的已发表发生率估计值,强调了关键的风险和资源因素,并确定了研究中的空白。