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The Pandemic Will Affect 69传媒鈥 Mental Health for Years to Come. How 69传媒 Can Help

By Arianna Prothero 鈥 March 31, 2021 9 min read
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As COVID-19 vaccines roll out and more schools inch toward fully reopening for in-person instruction, educators and policymakers are rightly focused on getting students caught up academically.

But that will be only half of the battle.

The pandemic, combined with a massive experiment in remote schooling, a racial justice movement stemming from police killings of Black Americans, and economic and political instability will have long-term effects on schoolchildren鈥檚 mental health. For the foreseeable future, educators will have to grapple with a host of additional challenges that will complicate students鈥 abilities to learn, such as increased anxiety, substance abuse, and hyperactivity鈥攁ll symptoms of the trauma many students have lived through this past year.

鈥淩ight off the bat we know that those stress reactions will make it harder for children to learn,鈥 said Robin Gurwitch, a psychologist and professor at Duke University Medical Center, and a specialist in childhood trauma. 鈥淥ne of the best predictors of how our children are going to do is based on how we鈥檙e doing as their parents and caregivers, and the pandemic has not left anyone un-stressed.鈥

Through her work, Gurwitch has witnessed firsthand the aftermath of mass shootings, natural disasters, and terrorist attacks. She was only a few years into her first job working as a child psychologist in Oklahoma City in 1995 when the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was bombed, killing 168 people in an act of domestic terrorism.

While this may be the first global pandemic that today鈥檚 schools have weathered, there are lessons that educators and policymakers can glean from other major disasters on how students will react and what kind of supports they will need.

Research highlights many possible responses

Research on how children have responded to traumatic events shows that there are myriad ways kids will react鈥攁nd those reactions may not always be obviously related to the pandemic.

69传媒 may have trouble concentrating or paying attention in class and retaining new information, said Gurwitch. Children鈥檚 responses to trauma sometimes look like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Gurwitch said, and schools and families might jump to that diagnosis and miss the opportunity to take a trauma-informed approach to addressing the root causes of students鈥 behavior.

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69传媒 may also have trouble with sleep鈥攕leeping too little or too much, said David Bond, the director of behavioral health at Blue Shield of California. Bond was previously a pediatric trauma specialist at the Rady Children鈥檚 Hospital of San Diego.

Another big issue for educators to look out for is a rise in substance abuse, in particular vaping. Bond is concerned that stress鈥攁nd just boredom from being at home all the time鈥攊s leading to an increase in e-cigarette use among youth.

鈥淚t makes sense,鈥 Bond said. 鈥淏ecause we can鈥檛 really go to restaurants, or go to concerts, or football games, ... or even go to school, our鈥攅specially young鈥攎inds are rather understimulated.鈥

About a year after most schools across the country were shut down in response to the pandemic, large swaths of students are saying that they are already experiencing some of these issues. In an EdWeek Research Center survey administered in January and February 2021, high schoolers reported that since the pandemic began, they are getting lower grades and procrastinating more on school assignments. They are distracted by anxiety and having trouble concentrating or remembering things. They are more tired in class and feeling isolated from classmates.

It鈥檚 the long haul that has gotten to Joel Castro, an 11th grader at Herbert Hoover High School in San Diego. He has been learning remotely since last March, and he said he is struggling with staying motivated in his classes鈥攕omething he hears from friends a lot, too.

鈥淓ven for someone who is introverted like myself, it鈥檚 crazy to me that I鈥檓 longing for attention,鈥 he said.

Staying connected with friends without a daily schedule that automatically brings them together has been tough, Castro said. He is not just missing the friends he has at school鈥攈e is missing the ones he hasn鈥檛 made.

鈥淚 feel like this is a crucial time in our development, figuring out what kinds of people we like to hang out with,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just disappointing.鈥

High schoolers aren鈥檛 the only ones struggling. Erika Brown, a kindergarten teacher in New Orleans, says she can see the effects of the stress of the pandemic鈥攊n particular a chaotic school schedule that has bounced between in-person and remote learning鈥攐n the little ones as well.

鈥淚t is harder to engage them and understand them socially,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey can鈥檛 explain to me why they feel the way they feel, or why the day is just challenging to them. 鈥 I do see a difference in how they are responding to school and how they cope throughout the day.鈥

While it is impossible to put an end-date on when students鈥 mental health will rebound, say Bond and Gurwitch, educators need to be prepared for those issues to persist for the next several years.

鈥淚 do think that kids will settle in, and I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 going to be years and years and years,鈥 so long as adults are proactive, said Gurwitch. If a student is struggling emotionally, don鈥檛 wait to intervene, she said. 鈥淛ump in early.鈥

What makes the pandemic unique

While there are parallels between the coronavirus pandemic and other traumatic events, this experience remains unique, said Bond. It鈥檚 not a single, terrifying, acute event like a wildfire or the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.

鈥淗aving this level of chronic trauma, I liken it to, if you held a five-pound weight in your hand for a few minutes, no big deal. Your arm can take the stress,鈥 said Bond. 鈥淏ut if you were told you had to hold that five-pound weight in your hand for four hours, that is really daunting. ... Something that was a relatively smaller stressor becomes becomes really fatiguing on your body. That鈥檚 what chronic stress is like: It鈥檚 a weight you can鈥檛 put down.鈥

Teachers also need to be equipped to understand and identify mental health issues in their students, such as through mental health first-aid programs or suicide prevention training, said Bond. Sustaining the necessary support for students鈥 mental health over the long run will require that educators also take care of themselves and their own mental well-being, and that school and district leaders make that a priority.

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It鈥檚 also clear that the pandemic hasn鈥檛 affected all students equally鈥攁nd it won鈥檛 down the line.

Some children have had a difficult year that doesn鈥檛 rise to the level of a traumatic experience, while others have lost financial means and loved ones.

The children that experts are most concerned about are the ones who were already living under highly stressful and traumatic circumstances, such as food insecurity or pervasive neighborhood violence. Those students have fewer reserves to draw on to weather the additional stresses and challenges posed by the pandemic.

COVID-19 isn鈥檛 the only thing weighing on young minds, either, said Marleen Wong, a professor at the University of Southern California鈥檚 school of social work and a nationally recognized expert on school crisis response.

鈥淚 also look at current events and I鈥檓 concerned about ... the recent political upheaval, the increase in racial tensions,鈥 she said.

Wong, who was formerly the director of mental health services at the Los Angeles Unified School District, said if there were one piece of advice she would give to schools now, it would be to start formalized assessments of students鈥 mental health to understand exactly what they have been going through.

鈥淲e also know that pre-existing conditions and pre-existing challenges are part of the assessment that needs to take place,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, of course, in situations in communities of poverty, in communities where there are large numbers of folks who have been exposed to crime or violence, especially among families of color, you really need to be concerned about how they have been affected most.鈥

However, even for students experiencing similar circumstances, the impacts can be uneven.

鈥淥ne thing I have learned, trauma affects people differently,鈥 said Jake Heibel, the principal at Great Mills High School in Great Mills, M.

In 2018, one of Great Mills鈥 students shot and killed his girlfriend at school, before fatally shooting himself.

鈥淲e are nearing the three-year mark,鈥 said Heibel, and the freshmen on that day are now seniors, poised to graduate. 鈥淪ome people dealt with it early on, and others struggle with it still today.鈥

That鈥檚 the case for both students and staff, he said, and balancing the differences has been a challenge. He admitted it can also be difficult sometimes to distinguish signs that students are truly struggling from more-typical teenage emotions.

鈥淏eing a teenager in many ways really does stink, and there are ups and downs, and our counseling staff tried to determine is this related to the shooting or just life in general,鈥 he said.

Another lesson from the shooting, said Heibel, was the importance of meaningful relationships between school staff and students in helping students overcome trauma. In response to the pandemic, Heibel recently created a mentoring program where participating teachers, who are matched with three students each, are tasked with monitoring students and how they鈥檙e coping.

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This has been a 鈥榶ear of heartaches鈥

Castro, the San Diego student, said he thinks it鈥檚 going to be a long climb out of the pandemic, and that it will affect his emotions, and those of his friends, for a long time yet.

鈥淭he whole year has been a lot of disappointments and heartaches,鈥 he said. 鈥淓specially for youth, who are more easily shaped by events than adults.鈥

But he is also optimistic. Hitting the one-year mark of the pandemic shuttering schools was motivating for him, he said.

鈥淚 guess that marker kind of serves as motivation,鈥 Castro said. 鈥淚鈥檝e made it this far, and things are starting to look up because there鈥檚 talk of maybe reopening schools in a few months. Vaccines are rolling out. It鈥檚 starting to feel like maybe we鈥檙e approaching the end of this.鈥

But the aftershocks of a traumatic event can shake students鈥 schooling for years to come. Brown, the New Orleans teacher, knows from experience. She was a 5th grader when Hurricane Katrina hit. Her family evacuated to Houston, not returning to New Orleans for another two years. Shortly after Brown moved back and started 7th grade in a city that was still struggling to rebuild after the storm, her mother died.

Brown said there are things she still grapples with as an adult that she traces back to that time.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard for me to adapt to change鈥擨 think that鈥檚 because of Katrina and losing my mom. I need structure,鈥 she said.

Brown says she has been shaped by both the storm and the teachers who invested in her, changing her life trajectory.

In particular there was a young 11th grade teacher placed in her school through Teach for America who pushed Brown to go to college and inspired her to join TFA and become a teacher herself.

If her experiences as a 7th grader offer her adult self any teaching advice, said Brown, it鈥檚 this: 鈥淭o be patient and to provide as much consistency and stability as possible. Those are the things that our kids can鈥檛 articulate that they need, but they need that, especially right now as things are ever-fluctuating.鈥

For example, Brown said, she sets aside time every morning to just chat with her class鈥攚hether they are learning in-person or virtually. They talk about their days, or she poses a question to the students. It鈥檚 something she can control, and it gives her students that consistency.

鈥淭his is another thing I would tell teachers鈥 is just to really see your students,鈥 she said. 鈥淟et them feel heard and seen.鈥

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Coverage of whole-child approaches to learning is supported in part by a grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, at . Education Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the March 31, 2021 edition of Education Week as The Pandemic Will Affect 69传媒鈥 Mental Health for Years to Come

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