Abstract

In the face of emergency situations, such as a global pandemic, individuals rely on their personal resources, but also on community dimensions, to deal with the unprecedented changes and risks and to safeguard their well-being. The present study specifically addresses the role of individual resources and community dimensions with reference to academic communities facing COVID-19-related lockdowns and the changes that these have implied. An online questionnaire was administered to 1124 Italian University students. It detected their sense of belonging and of responsible togetherness with reference to their academic community through community dimensions, their student self-efficacy as an individual resource, and their academic stress—potentially stemming from studying in the middle of a pandemic. A multiple mediation model was been run with structural equation modeling. The results show that both the community dimensions associate with higher student self-efficacy and the sense of responsible togetherness, while also associating with lower academic stress. Moreover, student self-efficacy, in turn, associates with lower academic stress and mediates the relationships between both community dimensions and students’ academic stress levels. From these findings, the protective role that community dimensions can exert on an individual’s life becomes apparent. Building on this, further strategies should be implemented to reinforce personal and community resources in order to strengthen individuals against potentially stressful circumstances.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic [1] has required the adoption of several protective measures to reduce the threat to individuals’ health and to the functioning of local sanitary systems [2]

  • This study aims at filling this gap through deepening the understanding around the following research question: can being part of an involving academic community play a protective role against academic stress when students have to manage huge and unexpected changes in their academic routines? The COVID-19 outbreak, which represents an unexpected emergency circumstance to be faced with, defines the context for the present study; it could have exacerbated students’ academic stress due to the changes it has imposed on their routines and habits, if not adequately managed by individuals and institutions

  • In the face of the COVID-19 outbreak, one of the greatest challenges university students have had to face has been to keep on track with their academic duties and workloads, while adjusting to online lessons and exams, changes in schedules and deadlines, and a lack of physical interactive contexts where they could share their experiences and worries among peers and with their supervisors [3]

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic [1] has required the adoption of several protective measures to reduce the threat to individuals’ health and to the functioning of local sanitary systems [2]. Attending online classes, taking online exams, and losing the physical context of face-to-face relationships, support and interactions, have meant that university students have been required to adapt massively, ranking them among the most affected populations by these worldwide changes. These adaptations have added additional pressure on students in the form of further exam-related anxiety (due to the new and unprecedented exam procedures), changes in exam dates, deadlines and schedules of lessons, different and unexpected academic workloads; all having been mentioned among students’ main sources of academic stress [4]. The methods and results of the study will be described and their theoretical and practical implications will be pointed out

The Community as a Protective Dimension
The Role of Student Self-Efficacy
Participants and Procedures
Sense of Belonging to the Academic Community
Sense of Responsible Togetherness Referred to the Academic Context
Student Self-Efficacy
Academic Stress
Data Analyses
Discussion
Findings
Limitations and Future
Full Text
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