Mental health is still viewed as peripheral, remedial, or individual rather than institutional and preventive.

Mental health is still viewed as peripheral, remedial, or individual rather than institutional and preventive.
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For decades, higher education across the globe sold a fairly standard dream: secure admission to a prestigious institution, earn a marketable degree, and move smoothly into employment. Rankings, brand value, and placement statistics were treated as proxies for success. However, the Annual Student Quest Report 2025, released by the International College and Career Counselling (IC3) Institute, suggests that today’s students, across regions and socio-economic contexts, appear to be recalibrating what they expect from higher education, prioritising well-being, safety, purpose, and long-term relevance over institutional prestige.

This shift reflects a generation coming of age amid overlapping crises: a pandemic that exposed mental health fragilities, economic uncertainty that unsettled linear career paths, rapid technological change that renders skills obsolete faster than degrees can certify them, and a global climate of anxiety shaped by conflict, climate change, and political instability. In such a context, it is hardly surprising that students ask a different set of questions: Will this institution protect my mental health? Will I feel safe here? Will my education have meaning beyond short-term employability?


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