3. Results
We structured the presentation of the results according to the three dimensions mentioned above, which allowed us to capture the experiences of the students on multiple levels and in the complexity of their manifestations.
3.1. Educational Dimension
Our research shows that most of the students (92.6%) managed to maintain contact with the educational institution and teachers. Online platforms, telephone, e-mail, or social platforms were an important resource for dealing with academia as direct in-person meetings had greatly diminished [
27]. Only 7.4% of the participants said they had failed to maintain a direct link or a link via an online platform (
Table 3).
The number of those who had difficulty maintaining links with the university is higher in rural areas.
Regarding the format of the classes, Romanian students clearly expressed their opinion in favor of the on-site (classical) courses (57.8%), which conveys that direct and live interaction is needed to ensure greater efficiency in learning and receiving explanations from teachers; 55.1% considered that online learning, teaching, and assessment should only be a crisis solution (
Figure 1).
Our research also shows that studying, reading, doing sport, and especially communication with those close to them were activities that most students did not give up during the state of emergency (
Figure 2).
Of the participants who did not keep in touch with the university, 66% also stated that their relationship with their university colleagues was affected. Moreover, 52% of those who failed to attend the online courses were affected by the lack of a regular routine; the lack of cultural activities, communication, and meetings with colleagues and friends; and the lack of movement (
Figure 3).
3.2. Emotional Dimension
The pandemic crisis, especially during the peak of restrictions, has primarily impacted people’s emotional states, perceptions, and behavior. This is also the case for students. Thus, 623 (61.5%) respondents considered this period to be a real challenge for them, and 642 (63.3%) considered it to be a trial, a test that they had to overcome.
A number of variables used in our analysis indicates a greater sensitivity among Romanian students towards the social and cultural components of life as parts of the emotional dimension. In this respect, the following variables were considered: loneliness, news, people with whom they lived, lack of a regular routine, uncertainty, lack of communication, lack of cultural activities, decrease/lack of income, lack of physical interaction with colleagues and friends, and lack of movement.
The importance of these variables was graded by the respondents using a 4-point scale, from 1 (very little) to 4 (very much). We considered the variables that had an average of 2 or more as having a high impact on students. Using a multi-answer question, the number of selections described a strong interest in the socio-cultural component, to which a certain pessimism related to the lack of perspective associated with the moment of crisis was added. The most frequent problem identified by the participants was the lack of physical interaction with colleagues, followed by the lack of movement, lack of cultural activities, lack of ordinary routine, lack of perspective, and loneliness (
Table 4).
Therefore, the lack of perspective and major changes in the education system generated a state of uncertainty, concern, and stress.
Students’ reactions during the isolation period and their frequency cover a wide range of expressions of emotional states that they experienced. Of these, boredom (with a very high frequency), irritability, and fear exceeded the average value of manifestations on a scale from 1 (rare) to 5 (very often). The other manifestations (intolerance, aggression, bouts of crying, abandonment, despair, and panic) recorded quite high scores, approaching the mean value of manifestations (
Table 5).
It is worth noting that the fear of getting infected led many students to pray to God for their health and that of their loved ones: 32.1% daily, 12.3% weekly, 35.6% sometimes, and 19.9% not at all.
Moreover, the fact that a large number of students (N = 642) perceived the isolation period as a trial of life indicates the presence of a series of temperate mental states, yet some perceived it as a chance to be released from many obligations (N = 444) and as a chance for rediscovery (N = 509) as well. These answers indicate a bright and constructive perspective despite a marked sense of frustration.
The general reaction of the students is subsumed under a moderate attitude of reserved optimism: 664 (65.5%) respondents considered that the danger would not end with the termination of the isolation period, and 303 (29.9%) considered that there would also be a second wave (a fact proven between August and September 2020). All of this rather signals certain expectations about the evolution of the pandemic and what will follow.
Our results show that the experience of isolation encouraged many participants to value what they have, their family, and loved ones more (81.5%), as well as to change their priorities (64.3%).
3.3. Social Dimension
Regardless of the effects of the pandemic context, 84.9% of the participants considered that the state of emergency, and implicitly the lockdown, was a good solution to reduce the spread of the virus.
With universities and university campuses closed, 72.2% of students said they lived with their parents during the crisis, 9.3% alone, 6.9% with their spouse, 8.4% with a friend, and 3.3% with a fellow student. Thus, the student way of life has changed, with family becoming a place of protection, safety, and refuge for many: 56.8% of students said that during the isolation period, they were supported by parents, 24.5% by a loved one, and only 9.9% by friends.
On a scale from 1 (not at all) to 4 (very much), students’ relationships with parents, neighbors, colleagues, siblings, relatives, and friends during the crisis were analyzed. Through their answers, the students evaluated the extent to which their relationship with the actors mentioned in
Table 6 had been affected.
The least affected were the relations with neighbors, with an average response of 1.41, followed by relations with siblings, parents, and relatives (1.53).
Of the 665 students (representing 65.6% of participants) who considered that their relations with their parents did not suffer during the lockdown, 431 (42.5%) considered that their parents had become the closest to them during those difficult times.
4. Discussion
In this research, we aimed to explore the impact of the emergency state imposed due to the COVID-19 pandemic on Romanian students by approaching three major dimensions: educational, emotional, and social.
Although they may represent totally different areas of analysis at first glance, there is a motivation for their selection: the health and protection measures imposed during the emergency state primarily affected the daily life and the traditional activities of students. The educational process underwent major changes, being transposed into a totally new and different online format. Universities were closed and most students returned home, thus creating an almost total change in their social activities. Their relations with parents, relatives, friends, and life partners were also affected. These two major changes generated different emotional states. Thus, we can say that the sudden change in traditional activities is mirrored in the social and the subsequent emotional changes. The students’ sense of belonging to the university community may have been lost, bearing in mind that they could only have a direct connection to the learning environment or to social activities in an online format. The lack of social contact had a particular impact, and the emotional effects were catalyzed by the news they watched and read, the lack of a regular routine, the lack of communication, the decrease in income, the lack of social interaction, etc.
The negative effects arose not as a result of a low degree of adaptability of young people to the new pandemic situation, but rather in response to the multitude of events that occurred in a relatively short time. In Romania, a state of emergency was declared in March 2020, and in May 2020, the toughest restrictive measures were implemented. Thus, all the social changes mentioned occurred within a relatively short period, consequently provoking significant effects.
Our results show inequalities between students, with students living in rural areas being disadvantaged, in particular as regards access to online educational resources and keeping in touch with the school and colleagues. This is because the resources and logistics needed to gain online access were not sufficient. Therefore, the gradual increase in restrictive measures was directly proportional to the decrease in access to education for students who belong to vulnerable groups, i.e., students without financial resources, without access to the internet, students from disadvantaged areas, from families with problems, or living in inadequate dwelling places [
28]. Moreover, the lack of experience in regard to online teaching and learning induced uncertainty, a sense of insufficient knowledge, and the emergence of cognitive gaps [
28].
UNESCO has identified large discrepancies between different parts of the world in terms of access to new forms of education. In South Asia or sub-Saharan Africa, for example, 89% of children do not have access to a computer [
29]. A report by Common Sense Media and the Boston Consulting Group showed that before the pandemic, between 15 and 16 million American students out of 50 million lived in a household that did not have access to the Internet, to a digital device, or both [
30]. There are also discrepancies if one considers the students’ place of residence: 21% of students are from urban areas, 25% from suburban environments, and 37% from rural areas. Differences were also registered from a racial point of view: 30% of the black population had these gaps, as well as 35% of Native Americans [
30]. Therefore, the correlation between the residence environment and the educational environment during the pandemic for Romanian students may correspond to a more general picture, of which the UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay warns: “(…) we now know that teaching and continuous learning cannot be limited to online means. (…) In order to reduce existing inequalities, we must support other alternatives, including the use of community radio and television broadcasts and creativity in all modes of learning. These are solutions that we approach with our partners, the Global Coalition” [
3].
In Romania, students’ access to educational resources during the closure of educational institutions influenced the education process at both pre-university and university levels. According to statistics provided by UNESCO, Romania had more than 3.5 million students who were affected by the epidemiological context during the state of emergency. An analysis by IRES showed that 32% of pupils did not have access to a functional device (e.g., laptop, tablet, desktop) to carry out their online activities [
31]. Moreover, 12% did not have internet connection or did have it but not powerful enough to allow online teaching activities. According to the data provided by NIS, only 66% of households in Romania had access to a computer with internet connection [
32]. Moreover, in rural areas, access was even lower, with only 48% having access to a computer and the internet. Our study shows that 56% of those who did not keep in touch with the professors and the university were from rural areas, suggesting that students confronted similar problems.
This research highlights that students prefer the traditional learning-teaching-assessment format, a result that is similar to other studies in the literature. For example, another research conducted in Romania—with 211 responding professors, 208 students, and 152 parents—showed that most of the participants preferred to return to face-to-face education [
33]. A study by Jordan University of Science and Technology showed that out of 730 students, two-thirds would prefer face-to-face exams [
34]. The factors that accounted for this preference were the difficulty of studying online, the lack of eloquent explanations in the online mode, and the possible inappropriate behavior during exams.
Our research shows that transferring courses to online platforms and the limitations in the pandemic context affected the students’ relationship with the university, both in terms of knowledge and learning as well as in terms of relation, communication, and freedom of expression. The whole situation was perceived by students as a temporary one, a solution to a crisis, and in no way was it considered as a future method for the functioning of the universities, nor did it represent the “new normal”. Moreover, our research shows that for an important category of students, studying, reading, doing sport, or communicating with those close to them have become coping strategies in critical situations. We can therefore say that although education was visibly affected in the state of emergency, through its various expressions, it has become a genuine resource for young people.
Our results indicate a number of emotional vulnerabilities experienced by young people in the face of critical moments generated by the pandemic. A degeneration of effective communication due to the so-called infodemia also contributed to this [
35].
The emergence of mental illness is the unseen part of the iceberg of pandemic consequences among students. In our analysis, states of aggression, intolerance, abandonment as well as states of crying, panic, fear, or despair were identified.
We found that isolation imposed in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic meant for the students a lack of social interaction with colleagues and friends, limited movement, and a lack of cultural activities and routine, which they felt had damaging effects on them. These could easily turn into serious sources of frustration and generate different emotional states, especially in the context of the pandemic [
36].
A longitudinal analysis, which began in 2018, investigated social networks and the mental health of students in Switzerland [
37]. The authors of the study showed that COVID-19-specific concerns led to online isolation, and that the lack of interaction, emotional support, and physical isolation were associated with negative mental health trajectories. In France, out of 3764 students, 22% perceived a high state of stress as a result of the COVID-19 infection of a person in their social network. This generated poor educational results, increased consumption of alcohol and tobacco, and the use of forms of entertainment to calm themselves [
38]. A study conducted in May 2020, in seven countries (China, Ireland, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan, the Netherlands, and the US), revealed that students from European countries were much more affected by the COVID-19 pandemic as compared to students from Asian countries [
39]. When the habits, routines, and behaviors long practiced by students in a certain social and educational system are suddenly cancelled and changed, uncertainty, frustration, psycho-mental imbalances, and adaptation difficulties arise.
The presence of mental disorders in times of crisis is not new [
40]. Our results belong to a more general trend of emotional changes during the pandemic period. Official data and recent studies have recorded two broad categories of people affected by these mental imbalances: the infected population suffered from post-SARS DSM-IV psychiatric disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, or depression, while the healthy part of the population was affected by anxiety, depression, lack of concentration, irritability, etc. [
41]. This fact has been noted since 2019, in a study conducted in China [
42]. In March 2020, research on a sample of 1116 citizens in the southern Iranian city of Rafsanjan found that 35% of the participants had mental health problems, anxiety, sleep disorders, and psychosocial imbalances [
43].
Recent research has shown that current measures to control the spread of the virus (physical distancing and quarantine) can trigger serious imbalances in mental health [
44,
45]. The study conducted by Rajkumar recorded a whole casework that described a worrying phenomenon: the onset of anxiety and depression as well as suicide attempts among a large segment of the population. The study conducted by Tang Fang using the Depression Scale (CES-D-20) and the Goldberg Scale (GAD-7) on the degree of anxiety and depression showed that the two imbalances in the mental state were identified in 26.47% (depression) and 70.78% of the respondents [
46]. The situation is similar in Romania. The IRES research, as of February 2021, shows that one in five Romanians felt more alone during this period, with the need for contact with other people being more stringent among women, young people, and people over 50 years old. It is also worth noting that “1 in 10 Romanians has gone through anxiety states in the last 7 days almost daily, 13% felt sad or hopeless, 14% could not control their worries, and 14% felt they had no interest or pleasure in doing anything” [
18].
Socially, relationships with friends and colleagues were affected by strong negative circumstances: lack of social interaction, lack of face-to-face communication, or lack of joint activities. It should be noted that throughout the period of the pandemic, these elements of direct mutual relationships were highlighted in different analyses [
37].
Our results show that during the isolation period, the relationships of the respondents with their neighbors were the least affected, followed by relations with siblings, parents, and relatives. In practice, the pandemic and the state-of-emergency measures have reactivated the resources of the “warm community”, in Georges Ballandier’s terms. In these communities, which are marked by deep organic solidarity, the students could reset their lifestyle and priorities. The isolation scenario brought to the fore social networks characterized by solid, time-checked links with a strong affective component. Parents, spouses, lovers, relatives, true friends, and neighbors represent in the equation of our lives a “significant other”, built through a direct, face-to-face relationship [
47]. Thus, planning the “stay-at-home situation” during the isolation period meant a reset of lifestyle and relationships with others. Direct human relationships were replaced by those in the virtual environment, keeping only close relationships with family, relatives, and close friends. The social circle of living interactions significantly shrank, and the former social life faded into a virtual universe or became a nostalgic memory.
Our study reveals that the absence of direct interactions has led to the degradation of the relationships of the participants with their friends and colleagues. This result demonstrates that social networks and new means of communication fail to replace living, authentic human relationships. At best, new technologies maintain the illusion of a relationship, becoming a kind of simulacrum of reality that proves its ephemerality in times of crisis [
48]. Likewise, online education may have the same effects. The fact that it is perceived as a crash solution by students demonstrates that technology, however sophisticated, cannot replace living interaction.
Social cohesion and human relations have suffered throughout this period. Studies show that in different countries, social cohesion was much lower in June 2020 than in other pre-pandemic intervals [
49].
Placed within a broader context of national and international research, our results are consistent with a general picture of the crisis:
- -
The state of emergency has had visible effects on students’ social networks; refuge was sought in different communication spaces and direct interaction waned;
- -
The emergency state also had an impact on the emotional sphere. The emotional states experienced by the students during this period heralded a series of experiences outside of the comfort zone with which they were accustomed. They produced a number of imbalances that were felt at a moderate and medium level of intensity;
- -
Constraints and limitations of the state of emergency have led to a reconfiguration of lifestyle, a change of priorities, and a reactivation of religiosity;
- -
Significant family and social networks have maintained direct relationships. They have been an oasis of normality and real sources of emotional support and help in any situation;
- -
Intellectual activities (study, reading) and hobbies (sport, music) have made the period of maximum isolation more bearable and easier.
A new direction of study starting from the results of our research could be an analysis of university drop-out as well as the educational situation of universities in 2021 as a consequence of the abovementioned pandemic effects.
6. Conclusions
Our research provides important insights into the educational, emotional, and social impact of the COVID-19 emergency state on Romanian university students.
We found that students accepted online education only as a form of compromise in relation to the epidemiological situation. They were affected by the transition to the online format, owing to little contact with the university and other students, and the lack of a regular routine.
On an emotional level, we found higher values in relation to the feelings of loneliness, panic, fear, aggressiveness, and intolerance due to the lack of cultural activities, the lack of the usual routine, and the limitation of communication and movement.
Socializing with friends and fellow students was also severely affected. The closure of universities led to their return home to parents, who were elements of support for the students in the context of the pandemic.
The results of this study established a number of trends in the self- assessment of students’ personal experiences during the state of emergency. The state of emergency during the pandemic period will remain a special experience in the students’ lives. Its dramatism was tempered well by an effective support mechanism, provided by solid social ties, intellectual formation, and a certain religiosity. This has produced good resilience among young people, but also in the communities they belong to.
The period of confinement can also be seen as an initiatory experience from which young people emerged stronger and more mature. In the long term, this moment could cause changes in the meanings of social relations, choices (professional, living space, consumption, travel, leisure practices), and—why not?—the metaphysical dimension of existence. It remains to be seen whether the COVID-19 pandemic will be remembered as a life lesson in the collective mind of students and beyond.