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From the hospital bed to the laptop at home: effects of a blended self-regulated learning intervention

From the hospital bed to the laptop at home: effects of a blended self-regulated learning intervention

Azevedo, Raquel

; Rosário, Pedro; Martins, Juliana; Rosendo, Daniela;

Fernández, Paula

;

Núñez, José Carlos

; Magalhães, Paula
| Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute | 2019 | DOI

Artigo de Jornal

Hospitalization poses diverse challenges to school-aged youth well-being and their educational path. Some inpatients, due to the hospitalization duration, frequency or the needed recovery period at home, may struggle when returning to school. To help youth cope with this challenge, several hospitals have been implementing educational interventions tailored to the school-aged children and adolescents needs. Nevertheless, pediatric inpatients with short stays and/or with a recovery period at home usually do not benefit from these interventions. Therefore, the present study implemented a blended intervention (i.e., face-to-face and online) with the aim of training self-regulated learning competences with hospitalized school-aged adolescents with short hospital stays. The intervention was delivered on a weekly basis for eight individual sessions using a story-tool. Results showed the efficacy of the intervention in promoting adolescent’s use of, perceived instrumentality of, and self-efficacy for self-regulated learning strategies. Overall, there was a differentiated impact according to the participants’ age, grade level, grade retention, and engagement in the intervention. These findings support previous research indicating that hospitals can play an important role as educational contexts even for inpatients with short stays. The blended format used to deliver the self-regulation learning (SRL) training also may be an opportunity to extend these interventions from the hospital to the home context.
This research received external funding of Government of the Principality of Asturias, Spain. European Regional Development Fund (Research Groups Program FC-GRUPIN-IDI/2018/000199). This study was conducted at the Psychology Research Centre (PSI/01662), School of Psychology, University of Minho, and supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology and the Portuguese Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education (UID/PSI/01662/2019), through the national funds (PIDDAC). This study was also supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology and the Portuguese Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher Education, through the national funds, within the scope of the Transitory Disposition of the Decree No. 57/2016, of 29th of August, amended by Law No. 57/2017 of 19 July. RA and JM were funded by doctoral scholarships by Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (SFRH/BD/128848/2017; SFRH/BD/132058/2017, respectively).

Publicação

Ano de Publicação: 2019

Editora: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Identificadores

ISSN: 1661-7827