Abstract

The COVID-19 epidemic has caused higher education institutions in Vietnam to immediately transfer from traditional classrooms to e-learning environments. This interacts with high expectations and habits of learning and training can adversely affect the mental health of students. The purpose of this study is to validate the DASS-21 scale for use in the mental health screening in Vietnamese students when they suffer an immediate psychological reaction in the e-learning environment. Strict statistical analyzes (including Cronbach's alpha, Exploratory Factor Analysis, Confirmatory Factor Analysis, Average Variance Extracted, Average Shared Variance) have led to a well-fitting model of DASS-18 with a three-factor structure to measure the mental health of Vietnamese students in an e-learning environment. Results DASS-18 reported the rates of depression, anxiety, and stress in levels of moderate severity or above in Vietnamese students at 50%, 19.7%, and 37.3%, respectively. However, a rate of anxiety up to 43.1% by using DASS-21 indicating that many students may be misdiagnosed for the level of anxiety. Finally, linear regression analyses are used to examine the influence of socio-demographic factors on the immediate psychological responses of students to an e-learning environment in the context of the COVID-19 epidemic.

Highlights

  • The 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a public health emergency of international concern (Wang et al, 2020)

  • This led us to doubt about the validity of the DASS-21 scale when Vietnamese students faced e-learning culture in the context of the COVID-19 epidemic

  • The findings show that the DASS 21 scale is ineffective in measuring the mental health of Vietnamese students in the e-learning environment

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Summary

Introduction

The 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a public health emergency of international concern (Wang et al, 2020). With the policy of the Ministry of Education and Training is "pausing to school, but not stopping learning", e-learning, television-based learning becomes the optimal solution when COVID-19 epidemic can be prolonged and complicated. At the primary and secondary education level, television-based learning has been used to maintain students' knowledge, while waiting to return to school. At the higher education level, e-learning is applied to the maximum extent possible in the formal university courses. The instant transition of higher education from traditional classrooms to e-learning, they interact with high expectations and habits of learning and training that can adversely affect the mental health of students (Kulsoom & Afsar, 2015). The academic context in the COVID-19 epidemic could further exacerbate the mental health of students

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