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The Well-being of Students in a Welsh Secondary School Before and After a COVID-19 Lockdown
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Background: There has been considerable research on the well-being of secondary school students, most of which focuses on health-related behaviour or mental health issues. The well-being process model provides a framework that examines predictors of positive and negative well-being outcomes. The model has been validated in many studies of workers and university students. The present study examined the model's applicability to secondary school students whose education is conducted through the medium of the Welsh language. COVID-19 has disrupted education and well-being, and the present study presents profiles of well-being before and after the first COVID-19 lockdown in Wales.
Aims: The first aim was to examine the applicability of the well-being process model to secondary school students. A second aim was to study students where teaching was in the Welsh language. Finally, the research examined the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown and identified predictors of current well-being after lockdown and the long term implications of COVID-19.
Methodology: The research was carried out with the informed consent of the volunteers and approved by the School of Psychology, Cardiff University ethics committee. The participants were 214 students (111 males), and they represented each year group. An online survey was carried out, and the pre-COVID-19 associations between the well-being process predictor variables and outcomes were examined using regression analyses. Predictors of current and long-term well-being post-lockdown were also examined.
Results: The data relating to the pre-COVID 19 periods confirmed that positive well-being was predicted by high scores for psychological capital and social support. Daytime sleepiness was negatively associated with positive well-being. Stress at school was predicted by high student stressors, negative coping, social support and low psychological capital scores. Post-lockdown well-being was predicted by psychological capital and negatively associated with academic stress and fear of infection, and the stress of isolation. The longer-term negative impact of COVID-19 was predicted by problem-focused coping, fear of infection, and social isolation.
Conclusion: The results confirmed the applicability of the well-being process model to Welsh secondary school students. Lockdown during COVID-19 affected well-being, with the risk of infection and the stress of isolation and academic stress being the major negative influences.
Sciencedomain International
Title: The Well-being of Students in a Welsh Secondary School Before and After a COVID-19 Lockdown
Description:
Background: There has been considerable research on the well-being of secondary school students, most of which focuses on health-related behaviour or mental health issues.
The well-being process model provides a framework that examines predictors of positive and negative well-being outcomes.
The model has been validated in many studies of workers and university students.
The present study examined the model's applicability to secondary school students whose education is conducted through the medium of the Welsh language.
COVID-19 has disrupted education and well-being, and the present study presents profiles of well-being before and after the first COVID-19 lockdown in Wales.
Aims: The first aim was to examine the applicability of the well-being process model to secondary school students.
A second aim was to study students where teaching was in the Welsh language.
Finally, the research examined the impact of the COVID-19 lockdown and identified predictors of current well-being after lockdown and the long term implications of COVID-19.
Methodology: The research was carried out with the informed consent of the volunteers and approved by the School of Psychology, Cardiff University ethics committee.
The participants were 214 students (111 males), and they represented each year group.
An online survey was carried out, and the pre-COVID-19 associations between the well-being process predictor variables and outcomes were examined using regression analyses.
Predictors of current and long-term well-being post-lockdown were also examined.
Results: The data relating to the pre-COVID 19 periods confirmed that positive well-being was predicted by high scores for psychological capital and social support.
Daytime sleepiness was negatively associated with positive well-being.
Stress at school was predicted by high student stressors, negative coping, social support and low psychological capital scores.
Post-lockdown well-being was predicted by psychological capital and negatively associated with academic stress and fear of infection, and the stress of isolation.
The longer-term negative impact of COVID-19 was predicted by problem-focused coping, fear of infection, and social isolation.
Conclusion: The results confirmed the applicability of the well-being process model to Welsh secondary school students.
Lockdown during COVID-19 affected well-being, with the risk of infection and the stress of isolation and academic stress being the major negative influences.
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