Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study

BackgroundDue to widespread SARS-CoV-2 infection, an emergency homeschooling plan was rigorously implemented throughout China. ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate the experiences and attitudes of elementary school students and their parents (two generations from the same family) tow...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cui, Shu, Zhang, Chao, Wang, Shijiang, Zhang, Xingong, Wang, Lei, Zhang, Ling, Yuan, Qiuyu, Huang, Cui, Cheng, Fangshuo, Zhang, Kai, Zhou, Xiaoqin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:https://www.jmir.org/2021/5/e24496
_version_ 1818946758251642880
author Cui, Shu
Zhang, Chao
Wang, Shijiang
Zhang, Xingong
Wang, Lei
Zhang, Ling
Yuan, Qiuyu
Huang, Cui
Cheng, Fangshuo
Zhang, Kai
Zhou, Xiaoqin
author_facet Cui, Shu
Zhang, Chao
Wang, Shijiang
Zhang, Xingong
Wang, Lei
Zhang, Ling
Yuan, Qiuyu
Huang, Cui
Cheng, Fangshuo
Zhang, Kai
Zhou, Xiaoqin
author_sort Cui, Shu
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundDue to widespread SARS-CoV-2 infection, an emergency homeschooling plan was rigorously implemented throughout China. ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate the experiences and attitudes of elementary school students and their parents (two generations from the same family) toward online learning in China during the pandemic. MethodsA 16-item questionnaire was distributed at the 10-day and 40-day marks after the start of the first online course to 867 parent-child pairs and 141 parent-child pairs, respectively. The questionnaire was comprised of questions pertaining to course and homework completeness, effectiveness, reliability, and abundance as well as the students’ enthusiasm for taking part in online classes and their satisfaction with the courses. ResultsOur findings indicate that 90.7% (786/867) of students exhibited high or moderate enthusiasm for participating in online classes. However, most students performed poorly in online learning classes and after-school homework. With regard to satisfaction, parents' and students' average scores were 7.35 and 7.25, respectively (10-point scoring system). During the second stage of this study, parents' positive evaluations for online learning declined, including those for the effectiveness and reliability of the courses. Furthermore, the proportion of students who completed the courses and homework on time decreased; this difference proved statistically significant (P=.047). The parents’ and students’ overall satisfaction with online learning also declined during the second stage (parents: 7.21; students: 7.23); however, the difference in overall satisfaction between the two stages was not statistically significant (parents: P=.53; students: P=.60). Several of the parents (315/867, 36.2%) indicated that assisting with and supervising the students’ online learning resulted in increased stress. Further, 36% of parents expressed dissatisfaction with or provided suggestions for online learning; most parents and students hoped to return to face-to-face classes (parents: 823/867, 94.9%; students: 811/867, 93.5%). Finally, our results presented the following six main issues that parents were the most concerned about: (1) disappointment regarding timely interaction in courses; (2) apprehensiveness about students’ understanding of the course; (3) the increased burden of annoying adult responsibilities; (4) concern about children's eyesight; (5) the idea that teachers’ explanations were not detailed enough; and (6) concerns about the decline of students' interest in and attention toward online courses. ConclusionsOnline learning can prevent the spread of infectious diseases while still allowing elementary school students to attain knowledge. However, in our study, children’s completion of the courses and homework were not satisfactory. Furthermore, their parents often experienced stress and had many concerns and complaints. Measures such as increasing the interactivity of the courses and prohibiting teachers from assigning tasks to parents could improve the effectiveness of these courses and the mental health of parents and students.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T08:19:01Z
format Article
id doaj.art-9a5ea8740987432ba6b896716443ffdc
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1438-8871
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T08:19:01Z
publishDate 2021-05-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
spelling doaj.art-9a5ea8740987432ba6b896716443ffdc2022-12-21T19:47:02ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712021-05-01235e2449610.2196/24496Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire StudyCui, ShuZhang, ChaoWang, ShijiangZhang, XingongWang, LeiZhang, LingYuan, QiuyuHuang, CuiCheng, FangshuoZhang, KaiZhou, XiaoqinBackgroundDue to widespread SARS-CoV-2 infection, an emergency homeschooling plan was rigorously implemented throughout China. ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate the experiences and attitudes of elementary school students and their parents (two generations from the same family) toward online learning in China during the pandemic. MethodsA 16-item questionnaire was distributed at the 10-day and 40-day marks after the start of the first online course to 867 parent-child pairs and 141 parent-child pairs, respectively. The questionnaire was comprised of questions pertaining to course and homework completeness, effectiveness, reliability, and abundance as well as the students’ enthusiasm for taking part in online classes and their satisfaction with the courses. ResultsOur findings indicate that 90.7% (786/867) of students exhibited high or moderate enthusiasm for participating in online classes. However, most students performed poorly in online learning classes and after-school homework. With regard to satisfaction, parents' and students' average scores were 7.35 and 7.25, respectively (10-point scoring system). During the second stage of this study, parents' positive evaluations for online learning declined, including those for the effectiveness and reliability of the courses. Furthermore, the proportion of students who completed the courses and homework on time decreased; this difference proved statistically significant (P=.047). The parents’ and students’ overall satisfaction with online learning also declined during the second stage (parents: 7.21; students: 7.23); however, the difference in overall satisfaction between the two stages was not statistically significant (parents: P=.53; students: P=.60). Several of the parents (315/867, 36.2%) indicated that assisting with and supervising the students’ online learning resulted in increased stress. Further, 36% of parents expressed dissatisfaction with or provided suggestions for online learning; most parents and students hoped to return to face-to-face classes (parents: 823/867, 94.9%; students: 811/867, 93.5%). Finally, our results presented the following six main issues that parents were the most concerned about: (1) disappointment regarding timely interaction in courses; (2) apprehensiveness about students’ understanding of the course; (3) the increased burden of annoying adult responsibilities; (4) concern about children's eyesight; (5) the idea that teachers’ explanations were not detailed enough; and (6) concerns about the decline of students' interest in and attention toward online courses. ConclusionsOnline learning can prevent the spread of infectious diseases while still allowing elementary school students to attain knowledge. However, in our study, children’s completion of the courses and homework were not satisfactory. Furthermore, their parents often experienced stress and had many concerns and complaints. Measures such as increasing the interactivity of the courses and prohibiting teachers from assigning tasks to parents could improve the effectiveness of these courses and the mental health of parents and students.https://www.jmir.org/2021/5/e24496
spellingShingle Cui, Shu
Zhang, Chao
Wang, Shijiang
Zhang, Xingong
Wang, Lei
Zhang, Ling
Yuan, Qiuyu
Huang, Cui
Cheng, Fangshuo
Zhang, Kai
Zhou, Xiaoqin
Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research
title Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
title_full Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
title_fullStr Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
title_full_unstemmed Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
title_short Experiences and Attitudes of Elementary School Students and Their Parents Toward Online Learning in China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Questionnaire Study
title_sort experiences and attitudes of elementary school students and their parents toward online learning in china during the covid 19 pandemic questionnaire study
url https://www.jmir.org/2021/5/e24496
work_keys_str_mv AT cuishu experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT zhangchao experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT wangshijiang experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT zhangxingong experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT wanglei experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT zhangling experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT yuanqiuyu experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT huangcui experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT chengfangshuo experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT zhangkai experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy
AT zhouxiaoqin experiencesandattitudesofelementaryschoolstudentsandtheirparentstowardonlinelearninginchinaduringthecovid19pandemicquestionnairestudy