‘It’s very lonely’: what are Australia’s university students missing out on?

‘It’s very lonely’: what are Australia’s university students missing out on?
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‘It’s very lonely’: what are Australia’s university students missing out on?
Author: Luca Ittimani
Published: Feb, 24 2025 14:00

Many start their studies hoping to find friends, themselves and intellectual stimulation. More and more are finding they’ve been sold something else. When Mai* started studying psychology in mid-2019, she looked forward to making the trip to the university for her tutorials, where she’d have lively conversations with classmates as they grappled with new ideas.

 [Luca Ittimani]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Luca Ittimani]

But her excitement turned to dread when her face-to-face tutorials were swapped for Zoom meetings in 2020. “People don’t switch on their camera – you just see names,” Mai says. “It’s very lonely, very isolating. There’s nobody to talk to if you’re struggling through a question.”.

 [University of Melbourne]
Image Credit: the Guardian [University of Melbourne]

Lecture halls, once packed with students, have been emptied in favour of pre-recorded talks, Mai says, some of which are reused from past years and are out of date. Even lab demonstrations have been replaced by lifeless, directionless Zoom breakout rooms.

 [Sam Lane]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Sam Lane]

Mai has sat through online classes that slumped into silence just halfway through their one-hour time slot as her lecturer pleaded for the grid of faceless audience names to engage with simple questions. “Nobody spoke,” she says. “It’s so awkward, it’s so painful, you just want to get out.”.

As soon as she graduated Mai moved to Hobart to study medicine, a rare course with compulsory in-person practical classes. Lockdowns were a fading memory and she expected a packed campus. But, apart from her medicine classmates, it was deserted, she says – as it remains two years later.

“I had this very naive vision of, ‘Oh, wow, I’m going to meet so many students from many different places’ – [but] a lot of students don’t attend, just because they have other work and life commitments,” she says. Australian students like Mai are entering universities expecting an experience many establishments no longer offer. They imagine themselves with time and space to explore big ideas with their peers and teachers, sharing vibrant discussions and a on a path to independent adulthood, only to find no one has time to sit around on the quad and talk.

Those who can’t afford to spend all week on campus – or who aren’t given the option for in-person classes – worry they’re missing out on a higher-quality education while being charged ever-increasing fees. Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads.

Students under financial pressure have cut back on classes and picked up more work, while cash-strapped universities have held on to unpopular but cheaper online classes. The result, students say, is a vicious cycle of falling campus attendance: as fewer students attend class in person, attending class in person becomes even less appealing, and universities offer fewer in-person opportunities because students are not showing up.

Many, like Mai, now ask themselves: “What’s the point of going on campus?”. Australian expectations for university life date back to the pre-1980s ideal of study without work, according to Dr Thuc Bao Huynh, a research fellow at Monash University’s Centre for Youth Policy and Education Practice.

“If someone was a student, they wouldn’t really be doing all that much else except being a student,” he says. “That’s not the case any more.”. The myth of campus life is butting up against the modern reality in which increasingly few students have the luxury of their studies and social life being their main responsibilities. Since the 1990s growing numbers of Australians from a broader range of backgrounds have taken the opportunity to study while working part-time to support themselves. Cost-of-living pressures have accelerated this trend, Huynh says, forcing more students to treat university as a part-time commitment.

As rent and living costs have risen, the share of students with jobs has jumped, according to several analyses. Nearly half of all students opted to study part time instead of full time in 2023. “Being a student is [now] mashed in with everything else that young people are going through,” Huynh says. “It’s just another thing that they have to deal with.”.

Struggling to juggle university and work and given the option to do their coursework online, Jedd Brockhouse’s classmates at La Trobe University in Melbourne’s north see no point in coming on campus. “If you know you don’t have to be there, then why fit in an hour of traffic to go and sit in a class for two hours?” he says.

Sam Lane only learned how much he had missed out on when he took a break from his law classes to try his hand at art history. He says he went to university in 2019 looking for the picture of campus life his parents had painted: “That kind of traditional sitting on the quad, going for beers and talking about your readings … everyone’s on the lawn at the same time and you run into people.”.

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