Resourceful students "firing pots in barbecues and doing fashion shoots in bedrooms" during lockdown
One in four design students says their wellbeing has suffered while studying from home during the pandemic, although half of them see advantages in remote learning, according to a survey conducted by Dezeen and Bath School of Design.
Eight out of 31 students who took part in the survey said they had suffered from wellbeing and mental health issues.
"My biorhythms have altered, insomnia has come and everything is like a continuous night," said interior design student Angélica Monge Garcia.
Graphic communication student Emily Taylor, 20, said the switch to remote learning "has negatively affected my wellbeing, mostly due to the anxieties of the pandemic and uncertainties about the opportunities that there will be for me after my degree." "Concentration and motivation are difficult"
The coronavirus student survey invited students at Bath School of Design, part of Bath Spa University in the west of England, to share their thoughts on student life amid the pandemic. The questions were written by Dezeen and sent to students by the school.
Read the responses in full here. Bath School of Design head Kerry Curtis describes how the staff and students responded to the lockdown in an opinion piece here.
Students took photographs of their home-working spaces as part of the survey. Top image: Oliver Bacon. Above, clockwise from top left: Bath School of Design students Melissa Cole, Oliver Bacon, Emily Taylor, Emma Gannon, Mateja Perosa, Katie Allen, Zoe Wea...
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