Understanding the Academic and Social Integration Process of Students Entering Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. New Students as a Vulnerable Sub-Population: Insights from the Integration and Emerging Adulthood Literature
1.2. New Students and the COVID-19 Pandemic
2. Methodology
2.1. Sampling Strategy and Participants
2.2. Data Collection and Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Gap between Academic and Social Integration
3.1.1. Integration Gap within Student-to-Student Connections
“My social life before COVID and now is completely different. It’s a completely different way of connecting with people and I really miss that. Also, for example, those group works remain very formal. Normally you get a coffee after a group work. Or if the weather is good, you go to a café together. And then you also have that informal aspect. And now it is just talking about what you have to do and you end the conversation”.(Niki, student from a bridging program, female, 21 years old)
“When I look at a screen, even though I try really hard, sometimes my mind does wander. And when you’re sitting there [on campus], there is more social pressure to be fully present. So, I do have the impression that I participate much more actively than at home”.(Jorik, first-year student, male, age unknown)
3.1.2. Integration Gap within Student-to-Professor Connections
“I think I learn the most from someone telling me something and then taking it in, in physical proximity. And then possibly get into a discussion about it. In lecture theatres for first year courses that is sometimes difficult, because you sit there with a lot of people. But I do think that, this mix of online and offline in a way somewhat limits the motivation. The contact with the professor, to be able to ask questions, via chat is so impersonal. And in real life now it’s with face masks, that’s not very inviting either. But I do miss that. I think it does affect the results a little bit”.(Walter, first-year student, male, age unknown)
“Sometimes you get lost in lectures and the professor just keep talking, talking. And after about 45 minutes: “any questions?” Then by the time it’s like counting five seconds “no, no, no okay, I continue to the next slide”. They’re waiting for you not to ask a question. They don’t even give you the room to talk or anything. That was quite difficult also”.(Martha, international student, female, 31 years old)
3.1.3. Integration Gap within the Broader University Environment/Student Life
“After the exams there were often a few of us standing around talking to four people or so, which was actually allowed, but then it was immediately like, "You have to go home”. I can understand that they want to be very careful and follow the rules, especially because for the rest they put so much effort into trying to do it all so well. But it is a little bit weird to have to leave immediately and not be allowed to talk”.(Jorik, first year student, male, age unknown)
“The exams were organized live and it is one of the first moments where you see wow there are so many of us. And you do feel somewhat united. I liked that, that it wasn’t held online. It gave me a lot of courage in a way”.(Walter, first-year student, male, age unknown)
3.2. Integration as an Increasing Individual Responsibility
3.2.1. Academic Integration as an Individual Responsibility
“I found it very difficult, for example, to go and look for the material myself everywhere. The professors put everything on the university’s online platform and they expect you to find it all and to know when to process it. But if you’ve never had that class before, you don’t know that at all”.(Niki, student in bridging program, female, 21 years old)
3.2.2. Social Integration as an Individual Responsibility
“I had a very active social life, but now I hardly see anyone anymore. So, I’m really falling into a dark space, so to speak. I really only know one fellow student. In the beginning I knew more, but because you see each other so little, those contacts diminish, you can’t maintain that. So yes, really a pity”.(Signe, first-year student, female, 19 years old)
“We are clearly not a priority I suppose. Most of the time it has been code red [i.e., closure of campus and courses are online], but that is so contradictory to what you do in high/middle school or elementary school. There they can eat all together in the refectory, that is only now being discussed, but apparently that has been happening for a year. But we are not allowed to sit with, let’s say, thirty people in a large auditorium with a rotation system. I sometimes find that a bit contradictory”.(Charlotte, student in bridging program, female, 21 years old)
3.3. Clash between COVID-19 Measures and Emerging Adulthood Expectations/Needs
3.3.1. Anticipation of Increasing Social Connection versus Social Isolation/Stability
“I had hoped, if it wasn’t for corona, that I would, for example, often with many people or with some, cook together or go out to dinner or go on picnics. With us at the student housing you have to be very safe. There are also 105 students or so, so you don’t just get to know someone else right away and that’s actually also with those rules of… […]. But I would have liked to meet with more people, invited more people also at student housing”.(Anne, first-year student, female, age unknown)
“That social life between my fellow students was actually completely lacking for me, it wasn’t there. You see people talking to each other and groups of two or three and then I thought, wow, I don’t have this, this really sucks. And then I thought, I have to do something, I’m going to approach some people. It was I think about five people and it didn’t work for all five of them. You do send something, but then you get nothing back. You keep trying and eventually, it’s just dead, it doesn’t work. And then I actually just kind of gave up on that. So now it’s really just exactly the same as before college. And I don’t see that changing”.(John, first-year student, male, 19 years old)
3.3.2. Need for Exploration versus Lingering Monotony
“Sometimes it’s really just too confronting how similar the days are. Whereas, in high school, I was a student council member on the core team, I was president, vice president of the last 100 days, I was on the school council. All days were different, until corona and now it’s just constantly the same and you just don’t feel like you’re alive”.(Naomi, first-year student, female, 18 years old)
“Everything becomes a bit monotonous and after a while you don’t feel like doing it any more. If something changes like you can meet again with ten people and you can go with a bigger group, that’s when things start to happen again. We’re all going to go away or we’re going to visit some museum or doesn’t matter what. Then there is just a bit more of a desire to do all that again. Whereas if it’s such a long time that you can only meet up with very few people, then after a while it sort of fades out”.(Jorik, first-year student, male, age unknown)
“I really did have a hard time. Especially after the exams in January, because you’re all the time rushing to those exams and studying and there was nothing to break that up. There was nothing, not a moment of yes, we survived. […] the break between studying and working hard, that’s just gone. I do go and meet up with my friends outside, take a walk, I go running, but that’s not the same as spending an evening chatting in a bar with your friends, not having to think about anything. For me personally, there is no break in my head”.(Niki, student in bridging program, female student, 21 years old)
“Especially the lack of perspective. Because I myself have been alone at home for a year and I also miss my friends a lot. And I never get to meet up with them either. So I get that people stop following the rules when you never know when you’re able to meet your friends again. But I also understand that there are rules and I also follow them one hundred percent. But I get that people don’t want to follow them anymore”.(Ella, first-year student, female, 18 years old)
3.3.3. Disrupted Freedom/Worry Balance
“There is also a risk within my family, so I don’t want to be the one who brings the virus home, or who makes someone sick in my family […]. But I feel now that it does start to weigh on me. Not so much the aspect of wanting to go out and go to bars, but just the aspect of if I want to meet up, I can meet up”.(Sara, student in bridging program, female, 23 years old)
“I always believed that networking is one of the most important tools we can use nowadays to do a lot of things. It was one of my motivations to study in Belgium to be able to network with people from diverse backgrounds. Because I believe that networking with people from diverse backgrounds is going to pave a way into my career that I’m looking for”.(Dennis, international student, male, 30 years old)
“The time of when you should be very carefree… That’s not now. When I do meet up with someone, you’re immediately concerned, is it actually allowed, or I have to be home by twelve o’clock. And it’s much more like that than purely studying, which I do miss now”.(Estrelle, first-year student, female, 19 years old)
“I do agree with going to a café after class or working in groups and then going to a coffee bar or something. You can certainly make friends there, but I think if the university says, for example, “okay, we’ll organize a walk” or something, I think it’s a bit forced in making friends. That would discourage me from participating”.(Manon, student in bridging program, female, 23 years old)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
5.1. Conclusion
5.2. Strengths and Limitations
5.3. Policy Implications and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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De Bruyn, S.; Van Eekert, N. Understanding the Academic and Social Integration Process of Students Entering Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12020067
De Bruyn S, Van Eekert N. Understanding the Academic and Social Integration Process of Students Entering Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(2):67. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12020067
Chicago/Turabian StyleDe Bruyn, Sara, and Nina Van Eekert. 2023. "Understanding the Academic and Social Integration Process of Students Entering Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic" Social Sciences 12, no. 2: 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12020067
APA StyleDe Bruyn, S., & Van Eekert, N. (2023). Understanding the Academic and Social Integration Process of Students Entering Higher Education: Lessons Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Social Sciences, 12(2), 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12020067