Student Affairs in a Traumatic Year

Birgit Schreiber, Teboho Moja, T. Luescher
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The year 2020 is a year that we will remember globally in higher education as having been most unusual, indeed, traumatic. If at the beginning of 2020 the year had a hopeful ring with plenty, as it comes to an end it is hard to just try and make sense of the extent that theexperience of higher education has been changed so incisively within a short time for both staff and students. And the signs are already there that the post-Covid‑19 period will not be short of new challenges either. Challenges like addressing the increased mental health issuesstudents suffer due to the crisis, illness, loss of loved ones and more. Moreover, there are many student groups whose ability to learn has been severely impacted by the pandemic and lockdown, including students from poor households, rural students, and students with special needs. As we noted in our last editorial, for these students, the campus environment and the services offered by Student Affairs departments is normally able to level the ‘playing field’ of learning. It will require yet another extra effort by student affairs professionals, academics, administrators, fellow students and the communities and families to ensure that these students can catch up and have access to the same quality and quantity of learning opportunities within supportive contexts over the course of their studies as others who have been less impacted.
创伤之年的学生事务
2020年将是我们在全球高等教育界铭记的最不寻常的一年,实际上是最痛苦的一年。如果说在2020年初,这一年充满了希望,但随着它即将结束,很难尝试并理解高等教育的经历在短时间内对教职员工和学生都发生了如此深刻的变化。有迹象表明,2019冠状病毒病后的时期也不会缺少新的挑战。诸如解决学生因危机、疾病、失去亲人等而遭受的日益严重的心理健康问题等挑战。此外,许多学生群体的学习能力受到大流行和封锁的严重影响,包括贫困家庭学生、农村学生和有特殊需要的学生。正如我们在上一篇社论中指出的那样,对于这些学生来说,校园环境和学生事务部提供的服务通常能够为学习提供一个公平的“竞争环境”。这还需要学生事务专业人员、学者、管理人员、同学、社区和家庭做出额外的努力,以确保这些学生能够赶上进度,并在学习过程中获得与其他受影响较小的学生相同质量和数量的学习机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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15
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7 weeks
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