Seeing lockdown through the eyes of children from around the world : Reflecting on a children's artwork project

Journal article


Foster, Mandie Jane, Al-Motlaq, Mohammad, Carter, Bernie, Neill, Sarah, OSullivan, Therese, Quaye, Angela A., Majamanda, Maureen, Abdullah, Khatijah, Hallström, Inger K., English, Christine, Vickers, Amanda, Coyne, Imelda, Adama, Esther and Mörelius, Evalotte. (2021). Seeing lockdown through the eyes of children from around the world : Reflecting on a children's artwork project. Nursing Praxis in New Zealand. 37(3), pp. 104-115. https://doi.org/10.36951/27034542.2021.039
AuthorsFoster, Mandie Jane, Al-Motlaq, Mohammad, Carter, Bernie, Neill, Sarah, OSullivan, Therese, Quaye, Angela A., Majamanda, Maureen, Abdullah, Khatijah, Hallström, Inger K., English, Christine, Vickers, Amanda, Coyne, Imelda, Adama, Esther and Mörelius, Evalotte
Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic created new challenges for children including access to education and limiting social and emotional connections to extended family, friends, and the community. Globally, opportunities for sharing children’s self-reported experiences during lockdown were limited. The primary aim of this project was to create an art-eBook that reflects children’s experiences of life during the COVID-19 pandemic that could be shared with other children around the world. Secondly, we wanted to reflect on the consultation undertaken within the International Network of Child and Family Centered Care (INCFCC) using Gibbs (1988) reflective cycle framework. Children from around the world were invited to submit a piece of artwork that reflected their experience during the COVID-19 pandemic via a Qualtrics-survey in May 2020. The children’s artwork and written pieces were transcribed verbatim into an eBook and the artwork was further placed into groups based on similarity of meaning. Fifty-five children from 17 countries submitted an artwork piece. Four groups were evident within the children’s artwork including infection control measures, positive experiences and emotions (connection to family, fun activities), negative experiences and emotions (social impact, emotional impact), and uniting children globally. The eBook illustrates how children of all ages can provide meaningful insightful commentary and valuable information on their experiences during an unprecedented pandemic.

Keywordsarts-based approach; child and family centred care; children’s experiences; COVID-19; eBook; Gibbs reflective cycle
Year2021
JournalNursing Praxis in New Zealand
Journal citation37 (3), pp. 104-115
PublisherNursing Praxis in New Zealand
ISSN2703-4542
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.36951/27034542.2021.039
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85124733457
Page range104-115
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online2021
Publication process dates
Accepted2021
Deposited07 Sep 2023
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https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8z9qq/seeing-lockdown-through-the-eyes-of-children-from-around-the-world-reflecting-on-a-children-s-artwork-project

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