Adult student perspectives toward housing during COVID-19
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Wellbeing, Space and Society
Abstract
Precarious housing conditions are on the rise in many developing economies, which has resulted in increasing
segmentation between population groups with different socioeconomic backgrounds, and in differentiated access
to life chances. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and its subsequent lockdowns, the relationship between
learning and housing conditions have become crucial for understanding an adult student’s learning experience
and well-being. However, knowledge about this relationship is limited. This study employs the concept of dwelling to
investigate how housing-related precarities may impact the experiences of students during COVID-19-induced
stay-at-home orders. The study draws on fifteen in-depth interviews and a Zoom Video Conferencing (ZVC)-aided
focus group in the Ashaiman Municipality in Ghana to explore students’ perspectives on precarious housing
conditions, well-being and learning. Findings reveal that experiences of precarious housing conditions can be
complicated and compromised in diverse ways related to quality learning environment, financial, and personal
well-being. Through ZVC-aided focus groups, participants defined housing suitable for learning—not purely in
academic terms, but in relation to housing characteristics, the neighbourhood environment, the built environment, and the social relations of learning. The study finds that students perceive an array of economic, social and
geographic barriers to learning and that these perspectives deserve attention in adult student housing policy
debate.
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Research Article