Unveiling the Educational Landscape: A Comprehensive Study of the Post-COVID-19 Galician Teaching Community and the Development of a Resilience Assessment Tool

Authors

  • Dr. Manuel Rial Costa

Keywords:

: Integrated music and art education, Animals in classical music, Art interpretation of animal imagery, Music-art matching, Children Environmental Stressors Vulnerability Women, Nigeria, Violence, children, Child Education, Human Trafficking, School confinement, jaded teacher, educational reality analysis, school uncertainty, educational repercussions.

Abstract

The past school year 2019-2020 has experienced a situation of school confinement, which forced the observance of an online education, with certain repercussions: affectation on students who had been dragging some previous difficulty (OEI), impossibility of access to technological tools for daily educational performance, uncertainty about when and how the return to normality should take place, i.e., return to face-to-face. This caused teachers to express not only uncertainty in the exercise of their teaching, but also to see themselves jaded by changes that have not served to improve their professional situation, requiring sacrifices on a personal level. A study carried out aimed at analyzing the particular educational situation in the Autonomous Community of Galicia (Spain), has revealed the weariness of the teaching class, with complete independence of the type of school to which they are attached: public, private or concerted. The need to carry out various sampling-participation processes, to obtain the sample required by the study, given its relevance, was what motivated the analysis of what leads the group of teachers not to participate, determining, through an indicator, the degree of boredom with them.

References

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Published

2024-01-29

How to Cite

Unveiling the Educational Landscape: A Comprehensive Study of the Post-COVID-19 Galician Teaching Community and the Development of a Resilience Assessment Tool. (2024). London Journal of Research In Humanities and Social Sciences, 24(1), 25-33. https://journalspress.uk/index.php/LJRHSS/article/view/852