Teaching in Hospitals and Healthcare Resorts: A Qualitative Study of Teachers’ Needs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Characteristic of Hospital Schools
1.2. The Characteristics of Work in the Hospital Setting and the Role of a Hospital Teacher
1.3. Purpose of the Study
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Introduction
2.2. Participants’ Characteristics
2.3. Instruments
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Organization of the Study
2.6. Methods of Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Material Needs and Needs for Systemic Change
All law regulations basically apply to mainstream schools and we have to adapt to those regulations.(T11)
It would be good if there were some knowledgeable, separate laws regulating the workflow of teachers in healthcare resorts.(T5)
It is difficult to store educational aids because in our hospital we haven’t had a permanent teachers’ room for several years now. We constantly change rooms and need to carry all those aids around. It’s not easy for me.(T3)
We try to find some space for ourselves. However, you know, medical science is still developing, and doctors need more and more room. We feel pushed around a little bit somewhere. It’s especially hard for subject teachers.(T11)
I just wish there was a place where a child could focus only on the lesson. We can’t have it and it’s really difficult for me.(T17)
Our experience is that when inspectors, who visit us from time to time, come and see how we work, they always say: How can you work here like that? Running around with books on a trolley? Can you even have normal lessons here?(T7)
Our facility has organized such conferences several times. Teachers from mainstream schools from our region were invited. The seminars were conducted by our teachers, educators, or the headmaster. Also, several doctors from our hospital talked about the characteristics of diseases. So, there were two perspectives: doctors’ perspective and teachers’ perspective. I think these conferences have been probably the most effective way to share knowledge and give mainstream teachers a different view. It’s been the best way to bring real results.(T18)
If there is a child at school with cystic fibrosis or type 1 diabetes, this kind of disease will stay with the kid for the rest of his life. When I’m talking about cooperation between schools, I mean that when the child is at the hospital, the mainstream school should prepare some educational activities about the disease or some training of the teaching staff and other school employees.(T4)
Mainstream school teachers often seem to be unaware of the emotional and physical consequences of a given illness that translates into certain child’s behaviors. Then, they assess this child in a wrong way, completely unknowingly. And the child is then undeservedly, incorrectly assessed.(T7)
3.2. Needs Connected with the Character of Work
Often, children with chronic diseases, who may have some problems with learning, fall behind. At regular school, they cannot catch up, and here they can.(T7)
The worst thing is that mainstream school teachers don’t understand that our work is fully individual. And a child who simply gets lost in a mass school, or is too stressed to attend lessons with thirty other children, in our school works one-to-one with the teacher and, as it has already been mentioned, can learn the material better than his peers from class, although our lessons are shorter.(T18)
There is no social awareness of what therapeutic assessment is, why it is so important in our work, and how it supports our students. I think of supporting mental well-being, helping students to deal with stress, and providing them with means of articulating the stress they experience. We, educators, focus a lot on taking care of a child’s well-being. We use educational and therapeutic content to support children’s positive self-image, and help them develop talents and strengths. We often run workshops of all types, for example, art workshops, interactive workshops, where everybody has a chance to talk with each other, exchange views.(T15)
For children school is an element of an ordinary, normal life.(T11)
It is important to explain to these parents and children what the hospital school is for and that it really helps to return to normality.(T19)
We are not here to tire the children up but to support them, especially in a situation, when their sense of security is in danger. And being in the role of a student really gives them stability and a sense of normalcy and continuity of life.(T7)
We have to adapt immediately to the situation of the moment.(T21)
I have to be extremely flexible. Because before I enter the hospital, I don’t know who I will go to and what state the child will be in, with what willingness to learn, and with what skills.(T8)
Sometimes we have very little time to assess what the child needs most to make him feel comfortable in the hospital at a given moment.(T20)
3.3. Psychological Needs
As teachers who work in hospitals, we should have support. I used to wonder about some supervision for teachers, similar to that the therapists and doctors in the psychiatric ward have.(T3)
The death of a child... All the children that I had a chance to meet and who passed away... I remember every child.(T16)
There are some work-related stressors… It’s really hard to cope with a student’s death. Even after many, many years of work, it comes back, and it resides somewhere deep within.(T4)
3.4. Self-Fulfillment Needs Resulting from Job Satisfaction
It is really gratifying that these children are waiting for us and that they know that they can come to us and they will get help.(T1)
Once a student told me that he came to the hospital only because I was there.(T2)
Even a high school student sometimes says: I want to always stay in this school.(T6)
It’s amazing that these kids wait for us, they don’t want us to go. Sometimes our school is the only school they miss. In the beginning, we sometimes have to look for them because they hide in the toilets or under the bed. But once we gain their trust, we have them on our side. Then, it’s they who start looking for us. I always say that at first, we’re waiting for them, and then, they’re waiting for us.(T9)
When the children came to say goodbye to me, they also said: We’re going to pack you in our suitcase and take you to our town and our school.(T10)
I’ve seen children cry when they leave the hospital many times. They’re leaving the hospital and they’re crying—it’s a bit strange, isn’t it?.(T17)
From the very beginning, I feel really happy when students smile when they see me.(T1)
For me, it is satisfying that the child is smiling, happy, and joyful.(T13)
What is satisfying for me? A child’s smile, which sometimes maybe is a bit weak because of all those medical procedures. And yet, when we give them hope, they smile.(T5)
It’s very important that children in our hospital school can be successful. With our help, thanks to less crowded lessons, we can devote more time to every child. We individualize our work, adapt it to the child’s capabilities so that they can achieve success.(T12)
One of my students said to me that she had learned more in our school than in her mainstream school.(T5)
Parents often tell us that they’ve learned something, for example, how to work with the child, what to pay attention to, and what they can work on with the kid.(T11)
3.5. Needs Connected with Social Relationships
3.5.1. Relationships with the Student
Even if we know that the situation is difficult, we cannot cry over the children. We have to bring them a piece of the normal world, a normal conversation, sometimes connected with the school, sometimes related to something else important for the child.(T1)
The educator must keep children company and support them. I think this is another important role of the hospital school.(T7)
3.5.2. Relationships with Parents
Our work as hospital teachers and educators also involves showing the parent what we do, and inviting them to work together, and this is sometimes a kind of springboard for them.(T20)
I always try to support a child’s relatives who are at the hospital.(T17)
We support parents and our empathy, which is really necessary in our work, comes straight from the heart. It’s not something that can be trained.(T16)
3.5.3. Relationships with Hospital Staff (Doctors, Nurses)
I often feel pushed around, medical staff treat me like an object. They play down my role.(T6)
When the doctor said that children were there to get better, not to study, I said to him that a healthy child meant a healthy soma and psyche and that we should not forget about it.(T11)
I think that cooperation with a psychologist and an attending physician also plays a very important role. We should let medical staff know how much we value their work and that they should also appreciate our role in taking care of children’s wellbeing.(T17)
If governments and hospital officials fully acknowledged that our work is needed and important, children and their parents would also know it. And if we are seen as dispensable, and that’s what some people think, then we don’t have enough space, dedicated rooms, or other resources. Sometimes you may get the impression that they expect us to be somewhere else.(T7)
3.5.4. Relationships with Mainstream School Teachers
Regular schools do not accept the grades we give. It’s a really big problem for us. They always have some objections and the headmaster of our school has to call them.(T5)
Our students work really hard. Sometimes we have a chemistry lesson, and there is a pump with chemo next to us. And then, the chemistry teacher from mainstream school does not want to accept the grades the student got. This is very upsetting for us.(T9)
Parents told me that teachers think of our grades as less important, they mark them as less valid and don’t want to count them in. This is a huge problem, and nothing has changed for many years.(T4)
The parents often intervene and tell us that the mainstream school hasn’t received the list of grades from our school. Of course, we always send them, sometimes more than once, but simply the teacher does not want to consider these grades. And then the battle begins between the hospital school and mainstream school. We try to convince them, but we really cannot do much about it. The mainstream school builds a wall between us. The parents come to us and ask: Why did you give those grades if they’re irrelevant?(T10)
The mainstream school said they would not give her a school promotion certificate based on our grades because they disagree with them.(T3)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Teacher | Gender | Degree of Professional Advancement | Experience as a Hospital School Teacher in Years | Professional Roles |
---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | F | appointed | 9 | Teacher (English, French, art, and music) |
T2 | F | chartered | 12 | Preschool teacher and educator |
T3 | F | chartered | 15 | Math teacher |
T4 | F | chartered | 16 | Educator |
T5 | M | appointed | 8 | Early education language teacher and educator |
T6 | F | chartered | 19 | English language teacher |
T7 | F | chartered | 27 | Religion teacher and early education teacher |
T8 | F | chartered | 8 | Preschool teacher |
T9 | F | chartered | 17 | German language teacher |
T10 | F | chartered | 8 | Polish language and history teacher |
T11 | F | chartered | 35 | Preschool teacher |
T12 | F | chartered | 27 | Polish language teacher |
T13 | F | chartered | 29 | Educator |
T14 | F | contractual | 2 | Educator |
T15 | M | chartered | 13 | Educator |
T16 | F | chartered | 15 | Educator |
T17 | F | chartered | 15 | Early education language teacher and educator |
T18 | F | chartered | 27 | Math teacher |
T19 | F | chartered | 26 | Educator |
T20 | F | contractual | 5 | Educator |
T21 | F | chartered | 34 | Preschool and early education teacher |
General Theme | Detailed Theme | Frequency |
---|---|---|
1. Material needs and needs for systemic change | Greater awareness of hospital schools’ legal regulations: implementation of a curriculum, internal evaluation system, personal data collection | 12 |
Difficult working conditions (no dedicated school rooms where lessons could be taught, no employees’ rooms) | 9 | |
Validation of the status of a hospital school | 9 | |
The need to educate teachers from mainstream schools about chronic diseases | 9 | |
The need to take into account the specificity of the school in law regulations | 3 | |
2. Needs connected with the character of work | Individualized work adapted to the student’s health condition | 13 |
The therapeutic dimension of work | 7 | |
Normalizing function of the hospital school | 6 | |
Flexibility and non-standard working hours | 4 | |
Work in various hospital wards | 4 | |
Interrupted lessons | 2 | |
Combined classes | 2 | |
3. Psychological needs | Coping with the death of a student | 6 |
Dealing with stress and strong emotions (the need for training) | 4 | |
Need for emotional support | 4 | |
4. Self-fulfillment needs resulting from job satisfaction | Good contact with students | 13 |
Student’s smile and joy | 9 | |
Student’s engagement in school | 6 | |
Student’s educational progress | 5 | |
Parents’ satisfaction and gratitude | 4 | |
Student’s signs of gratitude | 3 | |
5. Needs connected with social relationships | 1. Relationships with the student: | |
Supporting the student’s well-being | 7 | |
Improving contact with the student | 6 | |
Developing students’ passion | 3 | |
Supporting students in understanding the disease | 3 | |
2. Relationships with parents: | ||
Cooperation with parents | 12 | |
Social support for parents | 7 | |
3. Relationships with hospital staff (doctors, nurses) | ||
The need for space sharing | 11 | |
The need for recognition of hospital teachers’ role in taking care of children’s well-being | 4 | |
4. Relationships with mainstream school teachers: | ||
Need for mainstream school teachers to recognize grades given at the hospital | 14 | |
Collaboration between schools | 10 | |
The need to ensure that peers from the class have contact with the hospitalized child | 4 | |
The need to increase mainstream school teachers’ interest in the hospitalized student | 3 | |
Educating peers about the disease | 3 | |
Exchange of information between schools about school material they need to work on | 2 |
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Małkowska-Szkutnik, A.; Berkowska, A.; Gajda, M.; Kleszczewska, D. Teaching in Hospitals and Healthcare Resorts: A Qualitative Study of Teachers’ Needs. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 311. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11070311
Małkowska-Szkutnik A, Berkowska A, Gajda M, Kleszczewska D. Teaching in Hospitals and Healthcare Resorts: A Qualitative Study of Teachers’ Needs. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(7):311. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11070311
Chicago/Turabian StyleMałkowska-Szkutnik, Agnieszka, Aleksandra Berkowska, Maja Gajda, and Dorota Kleszczewska. 2021. "Teaching in Hospitals and Healthcare Resorts: A Qualitative Study of Teachers’ Needs" Education Sciences 11, no. 7: 311. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11070311
APA StyleMałkowska-Szkutnik, A., Berkowska, A., Gajda, M., & Kleszczewska, D. (2021). Teaching in Hospitals and Healthcare Resorts: A Qualitative Study of Teachers’ Needs. Education Sciences, 11(7), 311. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11070311