Tsujimoto Kimberley C, Anagnostou Evdokia, Birken Catherine S, Charach Alice, Cost Katherine Tombeau, Kelley Elizabeth, Monga Suneeta, Nicolson Rob, Georgiades Stelios, Lee Nicole, Osokin Konstantin, Burton Christie L, Crosbie Jennifer, Korczak Daphne J
Department of Psychiatry, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2025 Jan;53(1):29-42. doi: 10.1007/s10802-024-01252-3. Epub 2024 Oct 10.
Beyond achievement, educational settings offer informal supports that may be critical for child and youth mental health. However, children's educational environments have experienced significant disruption with the coronavirus pandemic. School settings offer unique opportunities to support children's mental health, but research must identify powerful points of intervention. This study examined school factors (aspirations, perceived competence, sense of belonging, and emotional engagement) as predictors of children's mental health, and the potential consequences of increasing screen time in and outside of school. Participants (N = 707) were parents and their children (6-18 years) from community and clinical settings who completed prospective surveys about children's school experiences and mental health symptoms (November 2020-May 2022). Standardized measures of depression, anxiety, irritability, inattention, and hyperactivity were collected. Structural equation modelling tested longitudinal associations between screen time, school factors, and mental health outcomes. Positive associations between each of the school factors (B = 0.14 [SE = 0.04] to B = 0.43 [SE = 0.04]) suggested they may reinforce one another. Longitudinally, sense of belonging and emotional engagement at school predicted lower severity for symptoms of depression, anxiety, irritability, and inattention (B=-0.14 [SE = 0.07] to B =-0.33 [SE = 0.10]). Greater screen time was associated with lower aspirations and perceived competence (B = - 0.08 [SE = 0.04] to B = - 0.13 [SE = 0.06]). Results suggest that school factors beyond achievement may be key correlates of child and youth mental health. While curriculum expectations emphasize academic achievement, an investment in supporting positive attitudes and aspirations at school is also warranted.
除了学业成就外,教育环境还提供了可能对儿童和青少年心理健康至关重要的非正式支持。然而,随着新冠疫情的爆发,儿童的教育环境受到了重大干扰。学校环境为支持儿童心理健康提供了独特的机会,但研究必须确定有力的干预点。本研究考察了学校因素(抱负、感知能力、归属感和情感投入)作为儿童心理健康的预测因素,以及在校内外增加屏幕使用时间的潜在后果。参与者(N = 707)是来自社区和临床环境的家长及其子女(6至18岁),他们完成了关于儿童学校经历和心理健康症状的前瞻性调查(2020年11月至2022年5月)。收集了抑郁、焦虑、易怒、注意力不集中和多动的标准化测量数据。结构方程模型测试了屏幕使用时间、学校因素和心理健康结果之间的纵向关联。每个学校因素之间的正相关(B = 0.14 [标准误 = 0.04]至B = 0.43 [标准误 = 0.04])表明它们可能相互强化。纵向来看,学校的归属感和情感投入预测抑郁、焦虑、易怒和注意力不集中症状的严重程度较低(B = -0.14 [标准误 = 0.07]至B = -0.33 [标准误 = 0.10])。更多的屏幕使用时间与较低的抱负和感知能力相关(B = -0.08 [标准误 = 0.04]至B = -0.13 [标准误 = 0.06])。结果表明,除学业成就外的学校因素可能是儿童和青少年心理健康的关键相关因素。虽然课程期望强调学业成就,但投资于支持学校中的积极态度和抱负也是必要的。