英文摘要 |
This research is aimed to follow three student patients who received hospital schooling due to health impairments. Their life course from receiving treatment during the early stages of onset until recovery and return-to-life on school grounds is described through their parents’perspective. This study utilizes the grounded theory for qualitative research and conducted in-depth interviews through a semi-structured interview framework to investigate parents’perception toward hospital schooling as well as this particular phase of students’course of education. Research findings and conclusions are as follows: 1. Typical members of society as well as students and faculty understand little about students suffering from childhood cancer. Relevant staff members are not familiar with the potential education resources available to patient students when they leave school grounds which may lead to possible doubts when administering care to students, resulting in problems with grade calculation and authority. 2. Returning to school depends on students’state of health as well as the stage of treatment. Students return to school on a progressive basis for it is impossible to absolutely determine whether they can return to life on school grounds. This means that the various education resources students receive upon return will certainly overlap. Relevant services may be gradually removed according to the adaptability of students returning to school. 3. The education resources students receive are only limited to compulsory education, with limited service content as well as time which cannot satisfy their educational needs. The interview results suggest that educational administrative units and schools should strengthen teachers’and students’awareness of childhood cancer, formulate clear score calculations and return-to-school procedures for the health-impaired students, and integrate the educational resources and services to help the health-impaired students’inclusion into school life. |