20 Colleges That Have Changed Their Reopening Plans
20 Colleges That Have Changed Their Reopening Plans · GOBankingRates

On Aug. 18, University of Notre Dame President Rev. John Jenkins announced that the school would be moving to online classes and closing public spaces for at least two weeks in an effort to curb the spread of the coronavirus on campus, the South Bend Tribune reported. The university had reported a total of 147 infections since the beginning of August. Notre Dame spokesman Paul Browne said that the increase in cases was due to a lack of cooperation from students in adhering to safety protocols, with many of the cases tracing back to an off-campus party where students did not wear masks or practice social distancing.

Notre Dame is just one of several colleges that have had to rethink their plans to open for in-person schooling due to coronavirus outbreaks, either on campus or in the greater area. Here are 19 other schools that have changed their reopening plans for the fall 2020 semester.

Last updated: Aug. 24, 2020

American University

  • 2020-21 tuition: $24,259 for fall semester only

“Evolving health conditions and government requirements now compel us to adjust our plan and offer fall semester undergraduate and graduate courses online with no residential experience,” American University officials announced in a July 30 letter to the university community. “This difficult decision is not what any of us hoped for, and we know you are as disappointed as we are.”

The university is providing a 10% discount for fall tuition, waiving the Sports Center fee for the fall semester and reducing student activity fees.

Berklee College of Music

  • 2020-21 tuition: $33,275 (includes reduced costs for the fall semester)

Berklee College of Music in Boston originally planned to offer hybrid instruction for the fall semester, but President Roger H. Brown later announced that the school would be going fully remote for the fall semester.

“When we look at the facts as they are unfolding across the country and abroad, we simply don’t feel confident that it would be healthy and safe for our community to be on campus this fall,” he said in a letter to members of the Berklee community.

Brown announced a number of cost-saving measures for the semester, including eliminating the 3.45% tuition increase planned for the year, waiving the comprehensive fee for students who enroll this fall, providing a one-time Back to Berklee Remote Learning Grant of $2,500 to all full-time degree students to help pay for equipment, instruments, software, technology or space rental and offering all full-time students two tuition-free credit-bearing courses to be taken in summer 2021.