'Who’s Distressed? Not Only Law Students: Psychological Distress Levels in University Students Across Diverse Fields of Study' by Wendy Larcombe, Sue Finch and Rachel Sore in (2015) 37(2)
Sydney Law Review 243 comments
Empirical studies consistently find that law students report high levels of
psychological distress. But are law students at heightened risk among their
university peers? The few available comparative studies suggest that law
students may experience higher levels of psychological distress than their
counterparts in medical degrees. However, data are scarce that compare the
distress levels of students in law with students in non-medical programs. The
study reported here addressed that gap by comparing the prevalence of
psychological distress among law students and non-law students undertaking
diverse academic programs at both undergraduate and graduate levels. The
findings show that a significant proportion of students in diverse fields and at
all levels of study reported high levels of psychological distress. Moreover, the
law students’ odds of reporting severe symptoms of psychological distress were
not the highest on any of the measures used. Overall, the findings suggest that
law students are not alone among university students in experiencing high
levels of psychological distress. We discuss the implications of this finding for
current efforts to address student wellbeing in legal education.
The authors state
Empirical studies in the United States and Australia have consistently found that
law students experience high levels of psychological distress. While results from the various studies are generally not directly comparable, the consistency in
findings seems to indicate that there are common factors in legal education that
contribute to student distress, notwithstanding wide variations in teaching
practices, learning environments and regulatory frameworks across institutions and
countries. Factors ‘typical’ of legal education posited to undermine students’
mental wellbeing include: the competitive academic environment in law schools,
exacerbated by normative grading and heavily weighted exams; high-stakes prizes
for achievement (narrowly defined) and the shrinking legal job market; an
emphasis on analytical, adversarial argumentation at the expense of experiential
and value-driven thinking; high student–teacher ratios and traditional or Socratic
teaching methods that further preclude students’ formation of meaningful
interpersonal relationships with teachers and classmates; a highly constrained
curriculum (driven by admission to practice requirements) that limits students’
exploration of established or emerging interests; high workloads, especially
reading requirements, coupled with the conceptual challenges involved in learning
to ‘think like a lawyer’; and the self-selection into law of certain ‘personality’
types who may tend to be driven, perfectionistic or achievement-oriented.
In an effort to redress and minimise such stressors, law schools in Australia
have introduced a range of initiatives and reforms in recent years. Many of these have been informed by a branch of psychology called ‘Self-Determination Theory’
(SDT), especially as it has been applied to legal education by Kennon Sheldon and
Lawrence Krieger in the US. SDT posits that there are ‘basic’, universal
psychological needs that must be consistently met — across the different domains
of life — to sustain intrinsic motivation and psychological wellbeing. Applied to
legal education, SDT-informed research and practice concentrates on students’
needs for relatedness, or meaningful connections with others, competence and
autonomy and the ways in which these needs may be supported (or undermined)
by conditions and practices in specific learning and institutional environments. Assessment practices, curriculum design, cohort interactions, law school culture,
and strategies to build competence in ‘threshold’ discipline skills are often the
focus of SDT-informed work in legal education. Insights from Positive
Psychology have also been drawn on in more student-centred wellbeing
initiatives. These typically aim to build students’ psychological literacy and
resilience, self-management and relationship skills, and develop cognitive
strategies to manage uncertainty, change and adversity. Such initiatives are likely to have multiple benefits for law students, during and beyond law school.
However, their impacts on students’ levels of psychological distress have not been
empirically assessed to date. Moreover, the impact of law schools’ efforts to
improve student wellbeing will be limited or even undermined if external or
environmental causes of law student distress are not also addressed.
An important, but as yet unanswered, research question is whether it is legal
education that is particularly stressful for students. There is some evidence to
suggest that university students in general experience high levels of psychological
distress. These findings are supported by data from university health and
counselling services who report increased demand from students, and also
increasing numbers of students experiencing severe mental health difficulties.
Some United Kingdom (UK) commentators suggest that the pressures on
university students have increased in recent years as a result of reductions in
government allowances, widening participation agendas and more limited job
prospects for graduates — factors common to other national contexts. Australian
research highlights changes in the university ‘student experience’ as students spend
less time on university campuses and more time in paid employment. Moreover,
when on campus, increases in student intakes and class sizes make it more difficult
for contemporary students to feel they are known by university staff members and
to make friends in classes. The extent to which such factors may be prompting
psychological distress among university students is not yet known.
It is also unknown whether law students are presently at heightened risk of
experiencing psychological distress among their university peers. Most of the
research with general university student populations has not collected data on
students’ field of study or academic discipline. However, for legal educators, the question of whether law students experience higher rates of psychological distress
than students in other academic disciplines is of considerable importance,
particularly in guiding work to support student mental wellbeing. In short, knowing
whether law students are at increased risk relative to other cohorts of university
students can tell us where and how to direct attention and resources. In particular,
such knowledge would afford legal educators some insight into the extent to which
law-specific curricula or ‘personality’ factors may be contributing to the high
levels of distress reported by law students. Similarly, knowledge of relative risk
would afford insight into the extent to which study in other disciplines contributes
to student distress. Given that many law students in Australia undertake
‘combined’ degrees — combining study in law with another Bachelor program —
it is particularly important to know whether efforts to support law student mental
wellbeing may be more effective if designed in collaboration across disciplines. In
this way, studies of student psychological wellbeing that investigate academic
discipline (or field of study) can contribute to evidence-based, good practice in
supporting university student mental health.
Data are scarce that compare the mental wellbeing of students in law with
students in other fields of academic study. Moreover, almost all the limited
existing research has compared the mental health of medical and law students, on
the basis that both programs are academically challenging, entry-to-profession
degrees with demanding workloads. Medical educators, like legal educators, have
been concerned for decades about the impacts on future practitioners of forms of
professional training that appear to produce or trigger very high levels of
psychological distress. And, while medical training has long been considered ‘high
pressure’, studies comparing medical and law students’ distress levels have often
found that the law students report even higher levels of psychological distress (on a
range of measures) than their counterparts in medical degrees. While this
suggests that law students are exposed to particularly high levels of psychological
stress, the assumption that law and medicine are inherently more stressful than
other academic courses — professional or general — should not remain untested.
Particularly when medical graduates have almost unparalleled job security, they
may not be the closest comparator for contemporary law students. Research is
needed that investigates whether law students are at heightened risk of
experiencing psychological distress when compared with university students
studying in different types of academic programs — professional and general.
The study reported here addressed that need by investigating the prevalence
and severity of symptoms of psychological distress among law students and nonlaw
students enrolled in diverse fields of study at both undergraduate (Bachelors)
and postgraduate (Masters) levels. The analysis draws on data collected in a study
of student wellbeing conducted in 2013 at The University of Melbourne, a large metropolitan university in Victoria, Australia. As detailed below, more than
4,700 students from six faculties/schools participated in the study by completing an
anonymous, online questionnaire that included the DASS-21 — a short version of
the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scales. This article reports the DASS results
for the law student sample and places those results in the context of published
DASS results for other law students and general population samples. The law and
non-law students’ results from the study are then compared in terms of the mean
DASS scores for each scale and the odds of reporting severe or extremely severe
DASS scores.
Our law students’ DASS scores support earlier research that suggests a
substantial proportion of law students experience high levels of psychological
distress. However, our comparative analyses indicate that, when law students’
levels of psychological distress are taken as the baseline, there are few statistically
significant differences in the results of non-law student cohorts. These findings
suggest that law students are not alone among university students in experiencing
high levels of psychological distress. Indeed, law students may not be at highest
risk among their university peers.
The article is organised as follows. Part II reviews published research that
compares the psychological distress levels of law students with those of other
cohorts of university students. Part III outlines the methodology used and the
participant sample in the 2013 study. Part IV reports the law students’ DASS
results in relation to other law student samples, as well as normative community
samples. Part V compares the DASS results of the law students and the non-law
students in the 2013 study. Finally, in Part VI we discuss the implications of the
reported findings for work currently being undertaken in law schools to better
support student mental wellbeing. Suggestions for further research are also offered.