honours thesis carleton

They started university amid a pandemic. Is the class of 2024 ready for what's next?

It was a strange experience for Jonah Grignon when he ran into a classmate at an art show during COVID-19.

Grignon, now a recent graduate from Carleton’s Journalism school, had taken all of his first-year classes on Zoom. It was a year later, while reporting on the art exhibit for his second-year class, that he bumped into the schoolmate and realized they had never actually met in person.

Grignon did not know if he should introduce himself. They already followed each other on social media and had numerous classes together.

“That (was) an experience I’ve never really had before,” Grignon said. “You’re sort of aware of someone’s presence, but you never really interacted with them.”

In hindsight, Grignon said the awkwardness during social interaction was temporary.

“Just last night,” he added. “I was out for dinner with the same classmate and a group of other people for a mutual friend’s birthday. I guess you can say that there was a happy ending to it eventually.”

Although the pandemic is in the rearview mirror, Grignon said the impact of COVID-19 on the pivotal years of his life felt like an axe hanging over his head.

“Even when things were good, it was like ‘when are we going to get shut down again?” Grignon said. “It was tough to deal with.”

Grignon was not alone in the perpetual fear of yet another wave of COVID-19 during the first few years of his undergraduate program.

The lockdown not only had a mental health toll on now-graduating university students but also had effects on their public speaking skills, stress management abilities and their use of social media as a coping mechanism. The ultimate question now is whether the class of 2024 is ready for what comes next.

Leya Aubert-Tandon, a graduating student from uOttawa’s biomedical sciences honours program, felt very socially isolated during her second year after moving to Ottawa for her studies.

She only made friends in her program in her third year when she was, as she put it, “actually in person.”

“Even though I was living with two people … mental health-wise, it was really a struggle for me,” Aubert-Tandon said.

Especially this past year, while Aubert-Tandon felt she was doing better in school, she said she struggled more. “I ended up going to see a therapist.”

The effects of mental distress combined with the lockdown also impacted Aubert-Tandon’s studies.

“Presentations are something students in biomed will have to do their whole lives, but for some reason the school did not teach students skills like public speaking,” Aubert-Tandon said.

“So a lot of us are socially awkward.”

That’s because there were shortcuts to help with public speaking during the pandemic. Aubert-Tandon said students often used little sticky notes on their computers to remember talking points, and did not have to put in the effort to memorize their speeches.

“This year was the first year I did presentations. I hadn’t done them since high school Grade 11,” Aubert-Tandon said, adding the five-year gap of not talking in front of a large group of people was common among her classmates.

After the first two years of university since the start of COVID, professors started to see gaps in skills in their students, said Kim Hellemans, a professor in neuroscience at Carleton University and an expert in COVID-19’s impact on student mental health.

“By the time (students) hit their third and fourth years, because they weren’t forced to memorize what they were learning, the outcomes were very different,” Hellemans said.

Meanwhile, new graduates are questioning how prepared they are for post-graduate programs, or their readiness to enter the working world.

Aiyana Louis, who recently graduated from Carleton’s environmental studies honours program, said half of her degree was a “blur”.

She kept multiple tabs open on her computer during class. She played loud music at home during tests. FaceTime calls with friends were her study groups.

“I guess as of today with my last exam, I’m finished. And I feel like there was a blur for two and a half years of my degree that I do not remember what I did.”

Louis, who minored in biology, said COVID-19 took away the experience of working physically in labs.

“Biology is very much hands-on in labs, (but) I completed an entire course of lab work on my computer which was obviously very disengaging,” Louis said.

“I really think that took me away from my interest in biology,” Louis added. “The biology I was interested in was hands-on looking at things through a microscope like planting, getting my hands in the dirt, which unfortunately just could not happen.”

Aubert-Tandon had similar opinions. She said COVID-19 did not allow students the best “hands-on experience” needed in work environments after graduating.

“I think it’s gonna impact a lot of us,” Aubert-Tandon said.

Aubert-Tandon plans on doing her masters in neuroscience in the joint program offered by uOttawa and the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, and eventually her PhD. She is hopeful for more in-person engagement during her masters.

But it’s not just hands-on experience that the students of COVID-19 lack.

Charles Collin, co-director of the honours thesis program in the psychology department at uOttawa, said students who have gone through COVID have weaker writing skills.

“During COVID we kind of made everything easy on everyone,” said Collin.

There are more academic accommodation and extension requests for both class deadlines and honours thesis projects, Collin added. And professors are “quite lenient with extensions.”

“For instance,” Collin said. “We almost never get any requests, or maybe just a couple out of the 100 students,” he added. “This year, I think there were at least a dozen. So it’s definitely gone up.”

Collin said uOttawa’s current policy for exam deferrals states that the first deferral a student requests will be granted automatically – a recent change mandated by the university.

“There’s no need for a medical note or any sort of explanation,” Collin added. “You just ask for a deferral, you got one.”

Collin worries that students will not be met with the same sense of accommodation in the workplace.

“You do need to go through some degree of stress in order to learn to deal with stress, but of course if you impose too much stress on people, that’s not gonna help them with anything,” Collin said.

Hellemans, the neuroscience professor, says this year’s graduating group of students have a very reduced ability to handle day-to-day stress.

“We’re seeing that in the form of students requesting a lot of academic accommodations regularly,” she said.

Hellemans helped develop courses at Carleton with student mental health in mind.

“(However), that doesn’t mean not stressing out a student at all. It means providing students learning opportunities to face challenges that will then promote growth as well as promote the ability to learn and to be successful in classes,” she said.

Hellemans said the solution to promoting mental health in the academic setting is not to remove or reduce stressors.

“My argument is (reducing stressors) actually makes it worse over time, especially when you’re removing mild to moderate controllable stressors.”

“It’s called stress inoculation theory,” she added. “It’s been tested on animals and plants alike.”

There’s a difference between feeling unsafe and uncomfortable, she explained. “In university, we should feel uncomfortable. We should feel sometimes like we don’t know what we’re doing.”

But Hellemans said professors and faculty alike are so afraid of causing mental health challenges that they’re removing deadlines.

To cope with the stress of university life, students like Aubert-Tandon planned their course loads wisely.

“I took as many courses that didn’t have exams and just did projects,” Aubert-Tandon said. “That’s what I did in my last two years, and it was amazing.”

Hellemans’ research lab also focused on the use of social media during the pandemic, which went up significantly, particularly among young women.

This professor said the increase in social media use over the last four years is a form of avoidance used by students when facing stressful situations.

Like drugs and alcohol, social media temporarily relieves stress, Hellemans said. On the other hand, “if you measure people’s stress levels when they are regularly using drugs, their baseline stress goes up.”

Hellemans also said problematic social media use contributed to the increased incidence of mental health disorders, including eating disorders “which has gone through the roof” during the pandemic.

Offline, Hellemans noted that this generation of students is also changing their stress relief mechanisms.

“Alcohol use is going down, and (students) are using cannabis more,” she said. While using alcohol can have visible signs of intoxication, cannabis is very subtle. “There are people who can use a small amount (of cannabis) throughout the day.”

Hellemans worries about how this behaviour pattern will translate into the workforce. “It might be tolerable in the classroom but it may not be at work.”

As for Grignon, he said coming back to in-person after so long created an appetite for socializing more.

“There was this level of interest where we just want to see people for real in person,” Grignon said. “Even though we lost a year or two, in some ways, I think it kind of brought us together.”

Grignon said interacting with younger students who were getting the full university experience during his third and fourth year was a wistful experience.

“It’s bittersweet,” Grignon said. “But you also see that the world is healing because you’re getting to see people have those experiences.”

Now, Grignon has a full-time position at an agricultural trade newspaper. Although he feels secure about this position after graduation, he doesn’t share the same sentiment about the state of the journalism industry in general.

“I sort of feel like I ended up in a very lucky position,” Grignon said.

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Jonah Grignon is graduating in journalism at Carleton University.

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honours thesis carleton

1. Electrostal History and Art Museum

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4. museum and exhibition center.

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War Memorial Noginsk

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This memorial in the district Glukhovo in Noginsk was erected in 1985 on the 40th anniversary of the victory in Second World war. The author of the monument is P.V. Peretinkin. The monument is dedicated to the natives of the district Glukhovo worked on the factories or fought on the fronts of the great Patriotic war. On 4 November 2015 the military fighter SU-27 was placed next to the monument. The inscription on the pedestal under Su-27 is: "To the native city from academician V. E. Fortov, 70 years of the great Victory in 2015".

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COMMENTS

  1. Psychology: Honors Project vs. Thesis : r/CarletonU

    Psychology: Honors Project vs. Thesis. I am a third-year psychology student at Carleton. I am heavily considering completing an honors project over a thesis. My original plan was to complete a thesis next year, and go to grad school when I graduate. However, with the pandemic and everything, I just can't see myself completing a thesis anymore.

  2. Undergraduate Research

    The Honours research project/thesis counts toward your degree as a 0.5 credit in the Fall OR Winter term or as a 1.0 credit (0.5 credits in the Fall term AND 0.5 credits in the Winter term), depending on your program. Within the 1.0 credit option, students must register in BOTH the Fall and Winter course. There are different requirements, timelines, grading methods, and more for the Honours ...

  3. Honours Project

    Honours research projects count toward your degree as 1.0 credit (0.5 credits in the fall term and 0.5 credits in the winter term). Students must register for both fall and winter term sections. The student is evaluated based on three components: lab work, thesis paper and presentation.

  4. Finding the Right Honours Thesis Supervisor

    In this workshop, you will learn what an honour thesis is, what is expected in honours thesis research, when to look for a professor, and the process of the honours thesis as a whole. To register, please log onto Carleton Central and click on Science Student Success Centre under the mySuccess tab. The invitation link to this workshop will be ...

  5. Honours Thesis

    Phone:(613) 520-2600 Ext. 5633

  6. Finding the Right Honours Thesis Supervisor

    In this workshop, you will learn what an honour thesis is, what is expected in honours thesis research, when to look for a professor, and the process of the honours thesis as a whole. To register, please log onto Carleton Central and click on Science Student Success Centre under the mySuccess tab. The invitation link to this workshop will be ...

  7. GEOG 4906/09 Honours Research Project or Thesis

    GEOG 4906/09 Honours Research Project or Thesis. A research project is based on a modelling, laboratory or field problem. Research Projects are supervised by a member of the department. The research thesis is an independent design and implementation of a research project leading to the submission of a research thesis.

  8. Finding the Right Honours Thesis Supervisor

    You are responsible for selecting a supervisor to become part of his/her lab. In this workshop, you will learn what an honour thesis is, what is expected in honours thesis research, when to look for a professor, and the process of the honours thesis as a whole.

  9. Psychology Honours Thesis or Project? : r/CarletonU

    A masters is a better investment for jobs related to psychology. Thake the thesis! the honours seminar courses should prep you for it. most master's require a thesis and it is not as difficult as you think it will be. also if you are considering a PhD it is a no-brainer. Hi! tldr: deciding whether to graduate early or take extra time in ...

  10. Theses and Dissertations

    Carleton University Theses & Dissertations. CURVE Theses and Dissertations Collection is the Carleton University institutional repository that contains all of our theses and dissertations from 1958 onwards, except Master's Research Essays. Dissertations & Theses Global database has pdf copies of many Carleton theses starting from 1997.

  11. Thesis Title Search

    Thesis Title Search. Electronic versions in PDF are available online from Proquest or from the online reference section at the Carleton University Library. Bound copies of dissertations are also held at the Carleton University Library. Please note: Thesis information will be available six months from the date of graduation.

  12. They started university amid a pandemic. Is the class of 2024 ...

    Charles Collin, co-director of the honours thesis program in the psychology department at uOttawa, said students who have gone through COVID have weaker writing skills.

  13. Things to Do in Elektrostal

    Things to Do in Elektrostal, Russia: See Tripadvisor's 801 traveler reviews and photos of Elektrostal tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in June. We have reviews of the best places to see in Elektrostal. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.

  14. War Memorial Noginsk

    This memorial in the district Glukhovo in Noginsk was erected in 1985 on the 40th anniversary of the victory in Second World war. The author of the monument is P.V. Peretinkin. The monument is dedicated to the natives of the district Glukhovo worked on the factories or fought on the fronts of the great Patriotic war.

  15. Moscow Oblast

    Moscow Oblast ( Russian: Моско́вская о́бласть, Moskovskaya oblast) is a federal subject of Russia. It is located in western Russia, and it completely surrounds Moscow. The oblast has no capital, and oblast officials reside in Moscow or in other cities within the oblast. [1] As of 2015, the oblast has a population of 7,231,068 ...

  16. Elektrostal

    Elektrostal ( Russian: Электроста́ль) is a city in Moscow Oblast, Russia. It is 58 kilometers (36 mi) east of Moscow. As of 2010, 155,196 people lived there.