Home school at the edge of chaos during the lockdown : Social workers’ perspectives
Tiitinen, L., Harrikari, T., Koivula, S., Romakkaniemi, M., & Fiorentino, V. (2023). Home school at the edge of chaos during the lockdown : Social workers’ perspectives. Children and Youth Services Review, 155, Article 107250. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107250
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Children and Youth Services ReviewDate
2023Copyright
© 2023 the Authors
As a response to prevent the spread of COVID-19, during the spring of 2020, home schooling replaced classroom education. From the social worker’s perspective, this paper explores how home school was organised among the social work client families and what types of resources were needed and launched to control the complexity of home schooling during the first wave of COVID-19 pandemic. The conceptual frameworks applied to theorise the self-organisation of home school and how resources were mobilised are complexity theory and social capital theory. The empirical analysis is based on digital diaries written by 33 Finnish social workers and analysed using a thematic qualitative content analysis.
The findings demonstrate the intertwined combination of social (social environment and communication), human (cultural, psychological and pedagogical) and physical (technological, spatial and biological) capital needed for the successful self-organising of home schooling. These capitals cannot predict the emergence of successful home schooling, nor can they function as a resource alone because self-organisation requires interactions between all essential dimensions. The results provide a deeper understanding for social work professionals regarding schooling and organising multidimensional support for children and their families.
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Writing this article is supported by Academy of Finland, The Strategic Research Council grants 335656/2020, 353971/2022 and 335442/2020, and The Ministry of Social Affairs and Health grant VN/25259/2020.License
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