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Taking a step back: US colleges returning to online classes

Published:Saturday | January 1, 2022 | 10:43 AM
A woman walks by a Yale sign reflected in the rainwater in the street on the Yale University campus in New Haven, Connecticut. More than 40 colleges across 16 states are starting the term online, and others say they're considering it. Many making the move now use quarter systems that start earlier than those with semesters.

With COVID-19 cases surging just as students are about to return from winter break, dozens of colleges in the United States are moving classes online again for at least the first week or so of the semester — and some warn it could stretch longer if the wave of infection doesn't subside soon.

Harvard is moving classes online for the first three weeks of the new year, with a return to campus scheduled for late January, “conditions permitting.”

The University of Chicago is delaying the beginning of its new term and holding the first two weeks online.

Some others are inviting students back to campus but starting classes online, including Michigan State University.

Many colleges hope that an extra week or two will get them past the peak of the nationwide spike driven by the highly contagious omicron variant.

Still, the surge is casting uncertainty over a semester many had hoped would be the closest to normal since the start of the pandemic.

For some students, starting the term remotely is becoming routine — many colleges used the strategy last year amid a wave of cases.

But some fear the latest shift could extend well beyond a week or two.

Jake Maynard, a student at George Washington University in the nation's capital, said he is fine with a week of online classes, but beyond that, he hopes officials trust in the booster shots and provide a traditional college experience.

He has already taken a year of online learning, which he said “did not work” and wasn't what he expected from a school that charges more than $50,000 a year.

“I'm a junior, but about half my schooling experience has been online,” said Maynard, 20, of Ellicott City, Maryland.

“You lose so much of what makes the school the school.”

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