Zhang Yuan, Garcia Miranda R, Lefkowitz Eva S
School of Social and Family Dynamics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
Women's Resource Center, Student Engagement and Wellbeing, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2025 Mar 20;22(3):459. doi: 10.3390/ijerph22030459.
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the living arrangements of many college students in the United States, potentially impacting their academic development, which plays a critical role in their mental health. At the start of the pandemic, university closures led to an abrupt transition from face-to-face instruction to online instruction, which may have caused significant challenges for college students, particularly lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and others who identify as having a minority sexual orientation and/or gender identity (LGBTQ+). To identify academic challenges and associated protective factors, we examined LGBTQ+ college students' social support from family and friends, the parent-child relationship quality, and their associations with academic challenges during the first months of the pandemic. The results of online surveys indicated that LGBTQ+ college students ( = 408; Mean Age = 20.4 yrs) who reported less family support and worse relationship quality with their parents perceived that academics had become relatively harder than before the pandemic. In contrast, friend support was unrelated to perceived academic challenges. These findings underscore the potentially protective role of supportive and high-quality relationships with family. The findings also provide insight into how universities could support students' academic success during other temporary academic breaks and sudden, unplanned disruptions, such as hurricanes or other weather-related events, which is essential in promoting LGBTQ+ college students' mental health and academic success.
新冠疫情扰乱了美国许多大学生的生活安排,这可能会影响他们的学业发展,而学业发展对他们的心理健康起着至关重要的作用。在疫情初期,大学关闭导致教学从面对面授课突然转变为在线授课,这可能给大学生带来了重大挑战,尤其是女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者、酷儿以及其他认同少数性取向和/或性别认同的学生(LGBTQ+)。为了确定学业挑战及相关保护因素,我们研究了LGBTQ+大学生在疫情头几个月里从家人和朋友那里获得的社会支持、亲子关系质量,以及它们与学业挑战之间的关联。在线调查结果显示,那些表示得到较少家庭支持且与父母关系质量较差的LGBTQ+大学生(n = 408;平均年龄 = 20.4岁)认为学业相比疫情前变得相对更难了。相比之下,朋友的支持与感知到的学业挑战无关。这些发现强调了与家人建立支持性和高质量关系可能具有的保护作用。这些发现还为大学在其他临时学业中断以及突发、意外干扰(如飓风或其他与天气相关的事件)期间如何支持学生取得学业成功提供了见解,这对于促进LGBTQ+大学生的心理健康和学业成功至关重要。