Exploring the consequences of Covid-19 pandemic on behavior and learning of children with special needs
Abstract
During global crisis, children with special needs are in real bind. COVID-19 pandemic has
been detrimental for the children with special needs (CSNs) due to closure of education and
therapies, social isolation, unstructured routine and economic deprivation of families which led
them to multiple forms of exclusion linked to their basic rights. The purpose of this quantitative
research was to explore the consequences of COVID-19 pandemic on CSNs in terms of
behavior and learning. 40 mothers with special needs children aged 3 to 8 years participated in
this study with a self-rated questionnaire, indicating that majority of the special need children
had unawareness about COVID-19 and failed to practice the preventive measures. Findings
also discovered that most of the CSNs had inaccessibility to education and therapies which
hampered their learning excessively. In addition, incapability to daily living skills, behavioral
implications like hyperactivity, aggressiveness, sleep disturbances and changed appetite
magnified the risk for CSNs. Additionally, findings highlighted increased negative parental
behavior, child abuse and unavailability of essential goods such as medicines prescribed by
physicians due to pandemic on CSNs. Therefore, this findings emphasis on further studies,
capacity development and policy reforms to ensure the service and mitigate the learning loss
of CSNs.