Having to adjust to a sudden change from face-to-face classes to online lectures is no joke. Students all over the globe have different insights about the setup caused by the Coronavirus outbreak last 2020.
Two years into the pandemic, the uproar of the virus is finally slowing down, and many countries and even local schools here in the Philippines have begun to reintroduce face-to-face classes, and Adamson University is no exception.
With the recent announcement from the University’s Vice President for Academic Affairs Dr. Catherine Castañeda, Adamsonians have been preparing for the long-awaited PhysiFlex, the modified approach to face-to-face classes coming this school year 2023-2024.
Of course, there were mixed reactions. Some were nervous, but most were excited. With the lack of social interactions with other students, otherwise known as “klasmeyts” for nearly two years, Adamsonians have been dreaming of this moment.
Despite the five months of preparation, worry is still very evident as students once again face another learning curve.
Students may face difficulties such as adhering to a new schedule, learning how to interact with their klasmeyts all the while maintaining social distancing etiquette, not being able to hug their BFFs like usual, and so much more.
But despite all of that, it really is exciting news for all Adamsonians, old ones, and freshies alike.
Being so far from the University, especially those who live in the provinces and even abroad, they have definitely missed roaming around campus.
Fun activities such as lounging around the garden cafe, crossing the one-way road that separated the Cardinal Santos and Saint Vincent Campus, and even the ever-exhausting walk across the neverending walkway were ones to do once they return to campus.
But what students miss the most is the bustling classrooms and halls that were always filled with students and teachers alike.
In 5-months time, the same rooms and hallways will be filled with the same students and teachers, alongside a few new ones, as if they had never been empty at all.
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