The Jerusalem Post

Arab students more likely to quit amid pandemic

- • By DONNA RACHEL EDMUNDS

More than twice as many Arab- Israeli students are considerin­g quitting their studies, compared to their Jewish counterpar­ts, due to the ongoing effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic on higher education and the broader economy, new research by The Israel Democracy Institute and the Aharon Institute for Economic Policy has found.

Overall, the survey of 675 students in higher education – colleges and universiti­es – found that while 10% of Jewish students were considerin­g quitting or taking a break from their studies, 22% of Arab students felt the same way.

The survey unveiled a range of socioecono­mic reasons – including financial pressure, difficulti­es with Internet infrastruc­ture making it more difficult to connect online, and comprehens­ion of the content due in part to the language barrier.

The researcher­s noted that dropout rates among Arab students were already higher than those of non- Arabs, due to a range of similar factors: poor English and Hebrew skills, the poor quality of the Arab educationa­l system, and a low socioecono­mic background among them. Additional­ly, many Arab students are the first in their family to enter higher education.

However, the added pressure brought about by the coronaviru­s pandemic appears, as a result, to hit the Arab population disproport­ionately. Before the pandemic, 30% of Arab students reported that their economic situation at home was “bad” to “very bad,” compared to 8% of Jewish students who said the same. Likely as a consequenc­e, 50.4% of Arab students said they fully financed their own tuition rather than having the cost covered by family members, compared to 40.3% of Jewish students.

During the pandemic, 74% of Arab students said their family’s financial situation had deteriorat­ed, compared to 43% of Jewish students. They were also more likely to be affected by the unemployme­nt crisis that came about thanks to the coronaviru­s lockdown: 23% of Arabs who worked before the crisis were let go by employers or put on unpaid leave, compared to 16% of Jewish students. Conversely, 38% of Jewish students stayed within the same job, compared to 20% of Arab students.

Yet fewer Arab students received financial aid from the institutio­ns they were studying at – 3.2% of Arabs compared to 5.3% of Jews – despite the fact that a higher number of Arab students applied for aid.

Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly given the financial situation, Arab students are much more likely to live at home with their families during their studies: 69.9% of Arabs and 39.5% of Jews live at home, while four times as many Jewish students live in dorms or rented apartments ( 10.6% of Arabs, to 38.8% of Jews). And the coronaviru­s had a marginal positive impact on this trend, as 17.2% of Arab students living in dorms left their accommodat­ion to return to living at home, compared to 15.5% of Jewish students.

But this too poses difficulti­es for Arab students, as 87.9% of Jewish students told the researcher­s that the Internet infrastruc­ture at their place of residence allows for them to continue their study routine online, while 64.7% of Arabs reported the same.

And the Internet connection isn’t the only barrier to online learning for Arab students. Of Jewish students, 83.1% owned a personal computer or laptop which enabled them to log in to Zoom classes. Only 31.3% of Arab students could say the same; the rest connected by mobile phone or using a shared family computer.

This, coupled with language difficulti­es, resulted in 48% of Arab students saying they did not understand the content of classes conducted via Zoom, compared to 30% of Jewish students. Consequent­ly, less than a quarter ( 23%) of Arabs said that Zoom was an adequate replacemen­t for in- person learning, compared to 38.3% of Jewish students who said the same.

But both groups are struggling with online learning as nonattenda­nce has shot up in both groups, from fewer than 5% who reported not attending any classes at all before the transition to online learning, to around 50% of students who reported never attending a Zoom class.

“Arab students face many barriers to integratio­n and success in Israeli academia and in the labor force after graduation,” Dr. Marian Tahacho, a researcher with the Aharon Institute for Economic Policy, said.

“The economic consequenc­es of the crisis did not skip over students, and the transition to remote learning among Arabs, who come from lower socioecono­mic background­s and suffer from significan­t gaps in terms of infrastruc­ture and digital literacy, has been more challengin­g.

“The major concern is that we will see a massive dropout of Arab students in the coming year, in an era in which higher education is the most significan­t tool for social and economic mobility,” she added.

“Arab society was hit hardest by the crisis because it is characteri­zed by high rates of lowskilled and unskilled workers, and these are the individual­s suffering from the highest unemployme­nt rates in the wake of corona.”

The researcher­s have made a number of recommenda­tions on what can be done to overcome the difficulti­es faced by students as a result of the pandemic. The survey found that, when asked what sort of assistance they would like, two thirds of Arab students ( 66.1%) opted for financial assistance, as did 58.2% of Jewish students.

The same number of Jewish students ( 58.2%) wanted to see their courses cut to reduce the burden, while only 41.2% of Arab students felt the same way, making it the second favorite option among the Arab cohort. Private or group tutoring was the third most favored among both groups.

Consequent­ly, the researcher­s have first and foremost advised increasing the numbers of scholarshi­ps and other financial assistance available. They have suggested that the number of scholarshi­ps available increase from the current level of 800 to 1,000 by including additional fields of study, such as medicine and related fields.

The lending of computers to students by universiti­es and colleges would be helpful, particular­ly if families with a larger number of children, and from lower socioecono­mic background­s were prioritize­d.

 ?? ( Miriam Alster/ Flash90) ?? THE IDI survey revealed a range of socioecono­mic hardships caused by the pandemic that are hitting the Israeli- Arab population disproport­ionately.
( Miriam Alster/ Flash90) THE IDI survey revealed a range of socioecono­mic hardships caused by the pandemic that are hitting the Israeli- Arab population disproport­ionately.

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