Inequitable Changes in School Connectedness During the Ongoing COVID‐19 Pandemic in a Cohort of Canadian Adolescents

Author:

Patte Karen A.1ORCID,Gohari Mahmood R.2ORCID,Faulkner Guy3,Bélanger Richard E.45,Leatherdale Scott T.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Sciences Brock University St. Catharines ON Canada

2. School of Public Health Sciences, University of Waterloo Waterloo ON Canada

3. School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Lower Mall Research Station Room 337, 2259 Lower Mall Vancouver British Columbia Canada V6T 1Z3

4. Projet COMPASS‐Québec, VITAM—Centre de recherche en santé durable de l'Université Laval, 2480 chemin de la Canardière Quebec City QC Canada G1J 2G1

5. Departement of Pediatrics Faculty of Medecine—Université Laval, Ferdinand Vandry Pavillon, 1050 Avenue de la Médecine Quebec City QC Canada G1V 0A6

Abstract

ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDWe examined whether subgroups of adolescents experienced disparate changes in school connectedness—a robust predictor of multiple health outcomes—from before the COVID‐19 pandemic to the first full school year following pandemic onset.METHODSWe used 2 waves of prospective survey data from 7178 students attending 41 Canadian secondary schools that participated during the 2019‐2020 (T1; pre‐COVID‐19 onset) and 2020‐2021 (T2; ongoing pandemic) school years. Fixed effects analyses tested differences in school connectedness changes by gender, race, bullying victimization, socioeconomic position, and school learning mode.RESULTSRelatively greater declines in school connectedness were reported by students that identified as females, were bullied, perceived their family to be less financially comfortable than their classmates, and attended schools in lower income areas. Marginally greater school connectedness declines resulted among students attending schools that were fully online at T2 than those at schools using a blended model.CONCLUSIONResults point to disparate school connectedness declines during the pandemic, which may exacerbate pre‐existing health inequities by gender and socioeconomic position, and among bullied youth.IMPLICATIONS FOR SCHOOL HEALTH POLICY, PRACTICE, AND EQUITYEffective strategies to improve school climates for equity denied groups are critical for pandemic recovery and preparedness for future related events.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Sick Kids Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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