Abstract

(1) Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has led to significant shifts in university students’ lives, which could be displayed by social mentality, a psychosocial conception at the individual and social levels. This five-wave longitudinal study aims to evaluate the changing social mentality of university students during the peak and preventive-order phases of the pandemic in China and investigate the trends and differences in social-demographic variables. (2) Methods: The Bi-Dimensional Structure Questionnaire of Social Mentality (B-DSMQ) was used to collect data from March 2020 to January 2021. Five-wave surveys were administered to 1319 students from five universities using online questionnaires. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare the changes in social mentality over time and covariate groups. Linear mixed models were used to explore the associations of overall social mentality with time and covariates. Post hoc analysis was implemented within subgroups, including university, major, grade, parenting style, and the harmonious degree of parents. (3) Results: Students’ social mentality changed significantly from Waves 1 to 5 (p < 0.001). It fell to its lowest in the third survey, increased in the fourth survey, and peaked in the fifth survey. In all of the subgroups, the changing social mentality differed significantly over time (p < 0.001). The p-values between groups suggested that changing social mentality was significantly different regarding gender, residence, university, major, grade, student cadre, graduates, nuclear family, economic status, parenting styles, and the harmonious degree of parents’ relationship (p < 0.001). (4) Conclusions: Social mentality among university students decreased during the peak of the pandemic before increasing in the contained-risk period. It was the lowest in June when students began to return to the pandemic-preventive campus from quarantined homes. Students living in provinces (except for Shandong) who were from high-level universities in 2016 and 2017 and who majored in medicine displayed a more negative social mentality. Students who were female, student cadres, non-graduates, and enjoying high socioeconomic status displayed a more positive social mentality. Further research is needed on the relationship between mental health and social mentality, specifically the associates and interventions for positive social mentality.

Highlights

  • Since the discovery of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in December of 2019 and the World Health Organization officially declaring it a pandemic on 11 March 2020 [1], the virus continues to pose a substantial global risk to public health and disrupts lives on an unprecedented scale

  • Except for Shandong, displayed a more negative social mentality

  • Our findings highlight the changing social mentality among university students during the peak and contained-risk phases of COVID-19, which might help inform other affected regions on how to prepare for the potential increase in mental health problems among university students returning to school

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Summary

Introduction

Since the discovery of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in December of 2019 and the World Health Organization officially declaring it a pandemic on 11 March 2020 [1], the virus continues to pose a substantial global risk to public health and disrupts lives on an unprecedented scale. Available research has proven that university students experience an atmosphere of cognitive distress and negative emotions due to social isolation, media information overload, reduced sleep quality, and a sense of numbness [2,3]. This environment, according to psychosocial research, is called social mentality. As a barometer of social stability, the mentality has had a substantial influence on individual mental health and social mobilization at the individual and group levels during the COVID19 pandemic

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