posted on 2019-05-13, 13:05authored byS Johnson, D Bamber, V Bountziouka, S Clayton, C Gilmore, R Griffiths, N Marlow, V Simms, H Wharrad
Objectives: Children born preterm are at higher risk for special educational needs and poor
academic attainment compared with term-born peers, yet education professionals receive limited
training and have poor knowledge of preterm birth. We have developed an interactive e-learning
resource and evaluated its efficacy in improving teachers’ knowledge of preterm birth and their
confidence in supporting the learning of children born preterm.
Setting: Eight primary, infant or junior schools in England.
Participants: 61 teachers of children aged 4 to 11 years, of which 55 (90%) were female.
Intervention: Interactive e-learning resource designed to improve education professionals’
knowledge of long term outcomes following preterm birth and strategies that can be used to
support children’s learning (www.pretermbirth.info). In a repeated measures design, participants
were given up to 30-days access to the e-learning resource, before and after which they completed
the Preterm Birth Knowledge Scale (PB-KS; scores 0-33; higher scores indicate greater knowledge) to
assess knowledge of outcomes of prematurity. Four Likert scale items were used to assess
confidence in supporting children’s learning and 10 items were used to evaluate the utility of the
resource. PB-KS scores and confidence item responses were compared pre- and post-resource use.
Results: PB-KS scores significantly increased after accessing the e-learning resource (median (95%
CI): pre-resource 13 (11, 14); post-resource 29 (28, 30)), equating to a 2.6 SD increase in PB-KS
scores. Teachers’ confidence in supporting children born preterm was also significantly improved
after using the resource. The utility of the resource was evaluated positively by participants with
97% recommending its use to others.
Conclusions: The e-learning resource substantially improved teachers’ knowledge of preterm birth
and their confidence in supporting preterm children in the classroom. Use of this resource may
represent a key advance in improving educational outcomes for children born preterm.
Funding
This study was funded by a project grant from Action Medical Research (Grant Ref:
GN2311). CG is funded by a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship.
History
Citation
BMJ Open 2019;9:e029720
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences
Requests for access to deidentified study data relating to primary outcome measures should be emailed to the corresponding author using the information provided above. Please note, four participants did not provide consent for data sharing. As such only a reduced set of data for 57 participants can be made available. Study results in this subgroup are commensurate with the results from the total sample.