Abstract

Law student mental health and wellbeing was already a growing concern in the UK prior to COVID-19, but when the pandemic occurred, widespread uncertainty placed an unprecedented level of mental health burden on students. Law students were faced with dashed hopes, uncertain futures and the fear of negative academic consequences. This burden was exacerbated in respect of postgraduate international students in London, who were often also forced to decide whether to return home to their families, or to continue their studies abroad, albeit online.
 This paper uses a case study approach to discuss how one provider of postgraduate clinical legal education (CLE), approached the promotion of positive student mental health both before, and in response to, the pandemic. qLegal at Queen Mary, University of London provides CLE to postgraduates studying for a one year law masters, and in 2019-2020, qLegal delivered CLE to 134 students from 27 countries. The impact that the pandemic had on the mental health of international postgraduate law students was therefore witnessed first-hand.
 This paper discusses the challenges faced, and concerns raised by international postgraduate law students at qLegal as a result of the pandemic. It examines the steps taken by qLegal to maximise student engagement and promote positive student mental health when rapidly switching to a model of online delivery. The paper concludes by outlining the steps qLegal will take to monitor and address the impact that online delivery in this period of global uncertainty has on the mental health of the next cohort of postgraduate CLE students.

Highlights

  • Law student mental health and wellbeing was already a growing concern in the UK prior to the COVID-19 pandemic

  • The global uncertainty resulting from recent events has exacerbated these concerns and placed an unprecedented level of mental health burden on students, especially those studying internationally

  • Practice Report taken to maximise student engagement and promote positive student mental health when rapidly switching to a model of online delivery of clinical legal education (‘CLE’)

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Summary

Introduction

Law student mental health and wellbeing was already a growing concern in the UK prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (the ‘Pandemic’). This paper adopts a case study approach to discuss how qLegal, the pro bono commercial law clinic within the Centre for Commercial Law Studies at Queen Mary, University of London (‘QMUL’) approached the promotion of positive student mental health both before, and in response to, the Pandemic. It discusses the challenges faced by qLegal and our students in the wake of the Pandemic, and reflects on the steps. BPP University Law School (2018), The law training report: What skills do firms expect new entrants to possess in the post SQE era?, pp.18-22 [online] available at https://s3-eu-west1.amazonaws.com/bppassets/public/assets/pdf/brochures/Uni-Law-SQE-Focus-Groups-Report2018.PDF

Practice Report
Concerns of international students
Law student mental health
Practice Report Legal Design Students
Building online engagement
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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