학술논문

Our COVID Stories: Adolescents Drawing Meaning from a Public Health Crisis Through a Youth Voice Intervention
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Contemporary School Psychology: The Official Journal of the California Association of School Psychologists. 28(1):97-107
Subject
Adolescents
COVID-19
Youth voice
University-practice partnership
Language
English
ISSN
2159-2020
2161-1505
Abstract
Policymakers, educators, and families throughout the world are concerned about the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on school-aged youth. Schools are working to help students readjust to school routines and regain lost ground on academic skill development while also addressing the wounds caused by the pandemic. This study describes one public charter high school’s effort to leverage a university-practice partnership to respond to adolescent students’ COVID-19-related stress. A 12-week intervention was developed based on youth voice principles; intervention activities focused on helping participants narrate and make sense of their COVID-19 experiences. Eight students participated in the full intervention; most participants were female (85.7%), Asian (71.4%), in the 9th grade (62.5%), and self-identified as ethnic and religious minorities (57.1%). Analysis of participant-produced youth voice artifacts illustrates participants’ conscious awareness of, and an ability to reason through, the COVID-19–related forces and events that affected them at all levels of their ecological systems. Qualitative analysis yielded eight themes: emotional experience, social isolation and lost social opportunities, self-improvement, family relationships, experience of school, influence of the state, and relationship to technology. Implications are shared for those seeking to implement youth voice–derived interventions in schools.