Resilience and COVID-19. An Analysis in University Students during Confinement
Date
2021Discipline
EducaciónAbstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life for millions of people. The social-emotional
consequences of the confinement need to be analysed urgently. This study examines self-perceived
resilience and its most important determining factors in a sample of university students facing COVID
confinement. The measuring instrument used is the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, divided into
four factors and applied to a sample of 253 graduate and postgraduate students. Different methods
of descriptive statistics and statistical hypothesis testing were used to calculate the results with
the statistical program SPSS–22. The results showed generally high levels of resilience among the
university students analysed, irrespective of socio-demographic variables. Factor analysis shows
resilience to be highest among male students and those over 25. Self-perceived resilience was also
higher among students who lived alone or with people other than their parents. Finally, students of
the health sciences were more likely to adapt to change, deal with today’s challenges, and think of
themselves as people capable of bouncing back after hardship.