New research reveals that although more than half of students feel like they belong to a community at their university, they still crave closer ties.
The report by Studiosity – Australia’s leading online study support service – found that students also feel polarised with almost the same number of students reporting they have no sense of community or belonging at their university as those that feel they wholeheartedly do (21% verse 20%).
Interestingly, international students feel a significantly higher level of belonging compared to their local counterparts (88% verse 78%), and males are more likely to consider themselves wholeheartedly part of a community, compared to females (29% verse 18%).
“Although it is encouraging that many students feel they are part of a community at their university, this research highlights that there is still substantial room for improvement,” Jack Goodman, Founder of Studiosity, said.
“The data also uncovered that an enormous 69% of students believe their sense of community/belonging at university affects their grades and overall satisfaction levels.”
Goodman said this is “powerful evidence” that improving the sense of community is crucial, not only to individual academic success, mental health, and general wellbeing, but also for the higher education sector.
Delving deeper into why students felt their sense of belonging impacted their grades, the leading reasons were because it made them more open to asking for help (40%), they felt less isolated (30%), and finally, it pushed them to work harder (23%).
Interestingly, being more open to asking for help was the leading response from students from all cities except Darwin and Tasmania.
A leading education expert passionate about this issue is Professor Judyth Sachs, Chief Academic Officer at Studiosity.
Professor Sachs said the research has highlighted key learnings for the sector, which will hopefully lead to proactive steps being taken to improve the student experience for everyone.
“Ultimately, every student deserves the opportunity to develop a sense of belonging at their university, and online students are not less deserving. For online students, accessibility and personalised support are even more critical,” Sachs said.
And according to Sachs, it is more than about reducing attrition, which has been studied.
“It is about equal access to positive experiences, interaction with peers and people of other backgrounds, to fulfil the promise of a university degree as a positive and life-changing investment,” she said.
“Quite simply, it’s about feeling you have a rightful place on campus and feel that you belong.”