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Eager to socialize, CEGEP students say in-person classes outweigh risk of delta variant

Starving for social interaction, young Quebecers entering CEGEP during the pandemic say heading back to class will do wonders for their mental health.

After a year of screens, young Quebecers are keen to re-learn how to interact with peers

Katia Slamani, left, and Sarra Kehlifi say making an effort to reach out to others, even when stuck at home, is getting them through the pandemic. (Holly Cabrera/CBC)

When high school friends Katia Slamani and Sarra Kehlifiwould talk about the day they'd go to college, they thought one of their biggest worries would be where to eat their lunch.

But the possibility of catching COVID-19 is what's on these 17-year-olds' minds, when they should be enjoying the start of theirfirst semester at Dawson College.

"I'm a little worried for this first semester, but I think it'll be great," Slamani said.

Unlike last year, universities and CEGEPswill be offering in-person classes this fall. This comes as a relief to many students who felt they were missing out on the college experience.

Students are expected to follow sanitary guidelines, including wearing a mask at all times indoors.

But while about one in four 18- to 24-year-olds in Quebec still haven't received their first dose, there is currently no requirement to be vaccinated on campus.

Exploring downtown

Beyond adjusting to a CEGEP course load, students like Medjine Joachim Dorcius are still wrapping their heads around pursuing higher education in English, her second language, at Dawson.

"A lot of my friends went here, so they said there's a lot of things to do," she said. "You're downtown, you can go places between classes."

Dorcius, a general social science student in her second year, spent a morning last weekmapping out the most efficient routes to get to classrooms, a rite of passage normally reserved for freshmen.

"We didn't really have a graduation so I didn't really get closure from high school," she said.

Second-year Dawson student Medjine Joachim Dorcius is considering taking up a varsity sport after persevering through a year of online learning. (Holly Cabrera/CBC)

Although she's eager to attend school in person, she's also worried that after two semesters of distance learning, many of her classmates will have their guard up.

"Now that I have to make connections, it's like 'Oh my God, I'm having social anxiety,'" she said. "It's like I don't know how to interact with people it'll be hard to make friends."

Learning in a 'square box'

International student Savath Sereyketya, 18, moved to Montreal from Phnom Penh, Cambodia for school.

He says in-person classes are essential for his mental health after online learning alienated him.

"I did not leave my parents and my country just to sit in front of the screen and do nothing," he said. "That's the whole point of coming back, and it's even motivating me to study."

Savath Sereyketya says his struggle with isolation while taking online classes is motivating him to improve his grades this semester. (Holly Cabrera/CBC)

Once a top student, he says the fatigue from studying in a "square box" of a room all day left him unfocused, and an unstable internet connection prevented him from accessing lectures, leading him to fail a course.

"You feel empty inside," he said. "And you have no one to discuss it with."

He says he's positive sitting in a classroom full of people will help bring his grades up.

Evanthia Vlahopoulous will be attending classes at two CEGEPs this semester. (Holly Cabrera/CBC)

Evanthia Vlahopoulous took advantage of online learning to build a schedule she liked.

As a full-time Cgep du Vieux Montral student, she'd listen to pure and applied science lectures by day and catch up on Dawson's humanities and English courses by night.

"It was a lot easier online because I didn't have to commute," she said.

All of her friends who went to Dawson have now graduated, so she says she'll have to get used to meeting others in a classroom under COVID-19 restrictions.

"I don't know how that's going to be in class, sweating with a mask," she said, adding that even though she's fully vaccinated,she's still concerned about the delta variant.

WATCH | What will the year look like in Quebec's universities?

What will the year look like in Quebec's universities?

3 years ago
Duration 13:24
Post-secondary students are coming back to campus, after a year of virtual classes. Concordia University professor Sylvia Santosa and McGill University student Shirley Xu speak to Catherine Verdon-Diamond about what they expect from the school year.