العنوان باللغة العربية
اتجاهات المُواطنة الصحيّة لدى معلّمي الدراسات الاجتماعيّة للتعليم ما بعد الأساسي في سلطنة عُمان: دور المتغيرات الديموغرافيّة في سياق جائحة كوفيد-19
Abstract
Abstract: This study explored the Health Citizenship Attitudes among social studies teachers in post-primary education stage in Sultanate of Oman, besides examining the impact of some demographic and personal variables. The sample consisted of (N =200) teachers. The descriptive analytical design method was used. Health Citizenship Attitudes Scale was developed to include knowledge of health citizenship, commitment to health citizenship values, and participation in promoting health citizenship values. The Face validity, and reliability of scale were also verified, using expert judges and the internal consistency coefficient that showed a reliable value of Cronbach's alpha (α =0.90). The results showed that the level of health citizenship attitudes among teachers was positive and high, with the mean and percentage of the total scale score (M = 3.88, 77.6%), and for knowledge of health citizenship (M = 4.17, 83.4%), for participation in promoting values of Health citizenship (M=3.93, 78.6%), and commitment to health citizenship behaviors (M=3.54, 70.8%). The results also revealed that there were statistically significant differences to variables of gender, rate of following Covid-19 news, educational governorate, and no differences were found regarding the variables of major and extent of commitment to preventive measures.
Keywords
health citizenship attitudes, social studies teachers, post-primary education, covid-19 pandemic, Sultanate of Oman
الكلمات المفتاحية
اتجاهات المواطنة الصحيّة; معلمو الدراسات الاجتماعية; التعليم ما بعد الأساسي; جائحة كوفيد-19; سلطنة عُمان
Article Type
Article
First Page
398
Last Page
414
Publication Date
10-3-2023
Recommended Citation
AL-Badawi, R, & AL-Maamari, S (2023). Health Citizenship Attitudes among Social Studies Teachers of Post-Primary Education in Sultanate of Oman: Role of the Demographic Variables in the COVID-19 Pandemic Context. Journal of Educational and Psychological Studies, 17(4), 398-414. https://doi.org/10.53543/jeps.vol17iss4pp398-414