Abstract

Even before COVID-19, university inductees were vulnerable to transitional stressors, which impact upon their psychological well-being and ability to complete their studies. Resilience, as a psychological construct, may be analogous to holding the functioning that supports higher-level academic performance in twenty-first century higher education (HE). Given the significant investment HE requires, coupled with students’ capacity to develop their resilience, universities may be expected to promote psychological resilience in new students. Linking HE to resilience, outdoor adventure (OA) residential programmes have enabled inductees to build components of resilience (i.e., increased self-perception, feelings of control, and intrapersonal relationships) that may heighten their immediate and longer-term academic performance. Yet, few studies have examined the sustainability of these effects. Across five annual cohorts, the self-perceived resilience of 2500 inductees was profiled across three time-point trajectories: (i) pre-OA programme, (ii) post-OA programme, and (iii) three months post-OA programme. Further, the functionality of inductees’ enduring resilience was evaluated for predicting their prospective academic performance at the end of their first year of study. Students’ self-perceived resilience, well-being, and positive recollection of OA experiences reflected their bounce-back ability and a healthy trajectory of productive functioning. Students reporting higher levels of resilience after three months of following the programme were more likely to achieve better prospective academic outcomes. The large sample size ensured that a powerful detection of change was established across time. However, given the absence of a comparison condition across all time points, any lasting improvements in students’ resilience was unable to be attributed to the OA programme. Nonetheless, the results give significant grounds for further research in this direction, including the study of more distinct narrative enquiries at follow-up. In this way, pedagogical practices, supporting effective interventions, may be deployed with incoming students, with the aim of building and maintaining students’ on-going resilience across different learning contexts.

Highlights

  • Introduction iationsThe global reach of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has presented significant challenges for the psychological well-being and adaptive capabilities of young people [1].Individuals under 25 years of age have reported worsening mental health and ability to cope during the pandemic than their older counterparts, aged over 65 [2]

  • Matched data are included at T3 for the Missing Data Set (n = 982) and last observation carried forward (LOCF) data set (n = 2541)

  • There were no significant differences in the total resilience (TR) and subscales at each time point between males and females, in either data set, with the exception of Spirit, where females scored higher

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction iationsThe global reach of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has presented significant challenges for the psychological well-being and adaptive capabilities of young people [1].Individuals under 25 years of age have reported worsening mental health and ability to cope during the pandemic than their older counterparts, aged over 65 [2]. The global reach of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has presented significant challenges for the psychological well-being and adaptive capabilities of young people [1]. Even before the effects of COVID-19 and lockdowns emerged, there were enduring concerns about the psychological development of the current cohort of young people. Risks to their mental health and productive functioning may come in the form of unemployment, over-reductive education, fast-changing technological advancements, high divorce rates, media intrusion, and consumerism [3,4,5,6,7]. The incapacity to cope with an accumulation of stressors will have caused some students entering universities to present low adaptive capabilities and heightened psychological distress.

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