Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE

From March 2020 until July 2020, the UAE implemented mandatory distance learning due to COVID-19, which meant that children had to continue their learning remotely at home. Though schools concerted exemplary efforts to ensure that children received all that was necessary through advanced technology...

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Main Authors: Fatma F. S. Said, Nadine Jaafarawi, Anna Dillon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
UAE
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/10/4/141
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spelling doaj-69efdf22aa484a3db0311dcba8dca9ca2021-04-15T23:04:04ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602021-04-011014114110.3390/socsci10040141Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAEFatma F. S. Said0Nadine Jaafarawi1Anna Dillon2College of Education, Zayed University, P.O. Box 144534, Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesLanguage Studies Department, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Zayed University, P.O. Box 144534, Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesCollege of Education, Zayed University, P.O. Box 144534, Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesFrom March 2020 until July 2020, the UAE implemented mandatory distance learning due to COVID-19, which meant that children had to continue their learning remotely at home. Though schools concerted exemplary efforts to ensure that children received all that was necessary through advanced technology platforms and interfaces, the duty of ensuring that children continued to engage in successful learning fell solely on parents. This paper is based on a self-report study conducted during this first period of distance learning where parents were invited to anonymously complete a survey and then be interviewed. The paper relies on interviews as its main data source. Interview transcripts once transcribed were thematically analysed. One recurring theme in the data was gender differences in domestic and other duties as well as attending to the educational needs of children. Mothers, irrespective of cultural or educational background, disproportionately seemed to be the caretakers of the home and of children’s educational needs. Mothers spoke of their mental health concerns, pressures of time management, and negative effects on their own work. This paper makes an original contribution by exploring parental experiences of emergency remote learning and what these reflect about parental ethnotheories in the UAE.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/10/4/141COVID-19emergency remote learningUAEmotherhoodparental ethnotheories
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fatma F. S. Said
Nadine Jaafarawi
Anna Dillon
spellingShingle Fatma F. S. Said
Nadine Jaafarawi
Anna Dillon
Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
Social Sciences
COVID-19
emergency remote learning
UAE
motherhood
parental ethnotheories
author_facet Fatma F. S. Said
Nadine Jaafarawi
Anna Dillon
author_sort Fatma F. S. Said
title Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
title_short Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
title_full Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
title_fullStr Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
title_full_unstemmed Mothers’ Accounts of Attending to Educational and Everyday Needs of Their Children at Home during COVID-19: The Case of the UAE
title_sort mothers’ accounts of attending to educational and everyday needs of their children at home during covid-19: the case of the uae
publisher MDPI AG
series Social Sciences
issn 2076-0760
publishDate 2021-04-01
description From March 2020 until July 2020, the UAE implemented mandatory distance learning due to COVID-19, which meant that children had to continue their learning remotely at home. Though schools concerted exemplary efforts to ensure that children received all that was necessary through advanced technology platforms and interfaces, the duty of ensuring that children continued to engage in successful learning fell solely on parents. This paper is based on a self-report study conducted during this first period of distance learning where parents were invited to anonymously complete a survey and then be interviewed. The paper relies on interviews as its main data source. Interview transcripts once transcribed were thematically analysed. One recurring theme in the data was gender differences in domestic and other duties as well as attending to the educational needs of children. Mothers, irrespective of cultural or educational background, disproportionately seemed to be the caretakers of the home and of children’s educational needs. Mothers spoke of their mental health concerns, pressures of time management, and negative effects on their own work. This paper makes an original contribution by exploring parental experiences of emergency remote learning and what these reflect about parental ethnotheories in the UAE.
topic COVID-19
emergency remote learning
UAE
motherhood
parental ethnotheories
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/10/4/141
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