Collegiette Issue 004

Page 10

PANDEMIC-INDUCED ONLINE CLASSES DRAIN STUDENTS Gianna Matassa

Doodles by Cameron Fisher In the second semester of learning during a pandemic, COVID-19 has forced all colleges to transition to an allonline format. While many students had hoped to return to the fall semester as either hybrid classes or fully in-person, this was deemed dangerous due to the spreading of the virus. Unfortunately, the new online format leaves students more stressed and mentally drained than ever before. The COVID-19 pandemic has turned the entire world into a quarantine frenzy to keep everyone safe from one another. People have been stuck at home with very little freedom since March 2020. For college students who are used to their freedom, this is a social nightmare. Many students left home to establish themselves and their independence, but that is no longer possible since the pandemic has caused this entire semester to be online for most people. Colleges face many challenges with this semester being online. Some of those challenges are financial; many universities have lost millions of dollars due to not having students on campus, while students have saved thousands of dollars staying home. Another challenge includes the pressure to give students the education they need without being on campus. While it is understandable that colleges keep students home due to the typical college life of dorms and partying, this has also been detrimental to students’ mental health.

1 | COLLEGIETTE

Picture this, students sitting at home all day staring at the same four walls, bored with technology, having a short attention span and all while trying to balance their online classes at the same time. For extroverts, this is mentally and emotionally draining by not being able to interact with other students or living with their best friends/roommates. According to Chardon State College, “One in four young adults between the ages of 18 and 24 have a diagnosable mental illness.” If that was the case prior to COVID-19, imagine how much worse it has gotten for students stuck at home. Many mental health struggles students face during this difficult time are attributed to the fact that many students feel they are experiencing more work at home compared to being in person at school. But they can also be attributed to technical difficulties with either Zoom or other sites they may use being so detrimental and can affect their grades, and students have often found that it is harder to get into contact with professors since switching to an online format. According to an article by Inside Higher Ed, “Fifty-six percent of college students surveyed also said they believed the education offered this fall will be less valuable than what colleges offered last fall.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.