Students and academics have expressed mounting concern about the impact of ongoing Chinese university lockdowns on learnersā mental health.
Students in several parts of the country, even those with low Covid-19 case numbers, still need permission to leave their campus. Some are only allowed to go out at weekends.
One student based in Hebei said that their campus lockdown rules had ānot been lifted at allā until the end of June, even though the province has not reported any coronavirus cases since early February.
āIt is hard to get permission to go out, and even with permission, you need to return to campus before 7pm,ā he told Times Higher Education.
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The student said that many of his classmates had stayed within the university confines for a whole year, while he had left only twice, on sick leave.
āStudents have been suffering; itās not just about being locked up physically, but also about feeling aggrieved,ā he said.
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Another student in Shanxi, whose university only allows them to leave campus at weekends, described the restrictions as a form of āformalismā.
āWe have been vaccinated and there have been no local cases, but my university decided not to follow some other institutions to lift the rules,ā he told THE. āMental health support for students? Not heard of it. There has only been lockdown, as long as it does not hurt some peopleās interests.ā
Meanwhile, academic studies are starting to track the impact of long-running coronavirus restrictions. One of 1,000 students in Shanghai and Nanjing, published last month, found that 73 per cent of participants reported decreased energy levels and 83 per cent showed signs of ādepersonalisationā in what was described as a āhalf closed-up environmentā.
Another , covering more than 500 students across 12 universities in Changsha, indicated that learners from poorer socio-economic backgrounds were more likely to report lower scores for mental health.
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Concerns about the lengthy duration of Chinaās Covid-related campus lockdowns first emerged last autumn, when students reported being required to stay on campus and check in daily using a location-based mobile app. Students reported that universities had installed CCTV cameras and barbed wire fences, and banned takeaways. They expressed anger online about the uneven lifting of restrictions across different institutions.
More than six months on, some universities still have restrictions in place. Institutions in Guangdong have been under a fresh lockdown since late May following a surge of Covid cases in the province.
Wendy Li, associate professor of psychology at Australiaās James Cook University, has been conducting a of Chinese studentsā mental health before, during and after lockdowns.
āFor students who stayed on campus during the lockdown period, isolation, lack of support from their family members, limited living and exercise spaces may collectively have a negative impact on studentsā mental health,ā she said.
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The study that Dr Li co-authored noticed improvements in the mental health of surveyed students in the post-lockdown period, which could be a result of ānovelty seeking, cultural factors and flexible teaching arrangementsā. This could shed light on how students may recover after months of lockdown.
āI believe these factors could still have the same effects even after a long lockdown,ā she said.
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