Nearly all of California State University’s classes may remain virtual, not only this fall but for the rest of the upcoming academic year.
CSU Chancellor Tim White, during a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee hearing on the pandemic and the future of higher education, said the decision in May to primarily move to a virtual setting for the fall term and “quite frankly the academic year was driven by health and safety issues and student progress.”
“A lot of people are using the past tense, ‘How did you manage the pandemic?'” he said, during his testimony. “This is not a two-month problem or a six-month problem. This is a 12-, 18-, 24-month, at a minimum problem.”
White, who has announced plans to leave his post by December, did not specify how the pandemic may affect colleges in the long-term. However, he said health officials are projecting a bump in infections this summer and later this year. “We imagine another bump this summer. We have a very strong forecast of a greater wave of this disease coupled with influenza come October/November and another wave coming in March/April,” he said. “So our planning has been for the longer-term rather than trying to figure out how we get to the next two weeks or two months.”
White, along with Minneapolis College President Sharon Pierce, Western Governors University President Scott Pulsipher and American Educational Research Association President Shaun Harper, explained during the hearing how campuses, students and faculty have coped under the pandemic and what more investment Congress could give to colleges as they consider re-opening in-person or virtually this fall.
The hearing comes as other universities like Harvard and Stanford announce that only a percentage of their courses will be online, and some groups of students, such as freshmen, will be allowed on campus in-person this fall. At Stanford, freshmen and sophomores would attend in the fall and summer quarters and juniors and seniors would attend for the winter and spring quarters.
White first announced in May that CSU’s 23 campuses would go largely virtual for the fall making the system the first in nation to go virtual because of the coronavirus’s spread.
On May 13, during an interview with EdSource he hinted that CSU may have to plan for longer periods of virtual learning.
“As someone who is a life scientist but not an epidemiologist. I’m of the opinion that it won’t be ready for 12 to 24 months. So with those realities out there, it seems reckless not to be planning to be able to continue the enterprise and students progress to degree through the virtual approaches in every way, shape and form that we can.”
White Tuesday told lawmakers that the system’s leaders considered the effects of opening classes in-person not only on students and faculty but the broader community. He referenced a recent outbreak in East Lansing, Michigan, where more than 150 people were infected with the coronavirus after a group of Michigan State University students hung out at a bar near the campus in June.
“We’re responsible for well over 530,000 people with our employees and with our students … and the communities where we’re embedded,” White said. “We came up with $50 million a month to do testing on a routine basis which is just not in the cards. Quite frankly, if you test today and you’re negative, and it’s an accurate test, that doesn’t mean you don’t pick it up tomorrow.”
Anywhere from 3 percent to 10 percent of CSU’s courses — those that require laboratories or health care training, for example — will be in-person, but “everything else will be done in a virtual space,” he said.
White also encouraged Congress to pass the $3 trillion Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions, or HEROES, Act, which would mitigate the effects of state budget cuts on both the CSU and the nine-campus University of California systems. CSU will lose $299 million in state funding unless California receives additional federal relief funding by Oct. 15. Because of the pandemic, CSU campuses estimate they’ve had $337 million of unanticipated new costs and revenue losses for the spring 2020 term, he said.
“Given the state of the economy, we anticipate increased needs for our students and that the demand for student support services will remain high,” he said. “New investments in technology to support a more robust range of tutoring, counseling and telehealth services will be needed. Additional federal action will be necessary to allow us to continue our critical work in support of our state’s and nation’s future.”
The HEROES Act passed the Democratic-led House in May, but has been ignored by the Republican-led Senate. It’s clear that the pandemic has impacted each school’s ability to deliver education, said California Rep. Susan Davis, a Democrat and chair of the House’s Higher Education and Workforce Investment Committee.
“Congress still has much work to do to pass the HEROES Act,” she said. “From providing institutions with additional relief, to protecting vulnerable students from fraud and ensuring all students can access and complete a college degree.”
Good I can’t wait to see all the screen recorded footage showing the Marxist indoctrination of our youth. Make all school online so the world can see what these teachers and education systems have done. Huge 👍🏼👍🏼
If this is their decision then I think all schools need to follow their lead. We are in deep trouble. I sure would not want to send my baby to school now.
De-fund Academia. This pandemic may be the catalyst that is needed to expose the government funded college scam. We will see enrollment numbers plummet this year.
just because the pandering liberals labeled it hero
does not mean it is good or will act like a hero
you see a hero is selfless ….
and we know no dem politician is a hero
i applaud all of congress not bowing and pushing this through it is riddled with yet again liberal political tendencies and fluff as well as piggyback tactics ….basically a liberal democrat national socialist attempt to circumvent any stop signs as they take advantage of the crisis instead of helping with it …..placing blame and attacking with political cowardes as usual …..
now the virtual is more than likely a sign of the future should we ever get out of this china attack …as they are of course ramping up another world ticker as we speak …..
saying that i still can not believe that anyone believes what is comming out of china as its media and gov control the country with false statements and or no information as a national communist socialist country does
we need to embrace the subtle changes to schooling so we can expand on the tech and social concerns associated with cyber schooling ….and bring forth a high grade of teaching and learning should it become the norm ….for the united states of america …..
work on your immune systems and health in general …..be safe as you want to be and calm down and actually look around and stop following scare tactics ….dont live your life by what a liberal politician says ….they do not have YOUR best interest or safety on their minds …..only their careers and wealth ….huh sounds like they are not the socialists that they preach but actually capitalistic using you to and your tax money to further their wealth and control …..
that was not too hard to figure out now was it
keep america free and push for higher education ….thats the only way it will happen
If colleges cannot afford to run without a heavy dose of taxpayer’s dollars and clearly cannot justify a tuition increase under the circumstances, they need to take a hard long look at themselves. Maybe students should work and wait it out a year or two until they feel comfortable going to in person classes. Students should certainly not be encouraged or allowed to take out loans to cover the costs of a make-do education.
Unfortunately there are classes that should be held in person due to the content such as the lab portion of science classes like chemistry and biology, public speaking parts of English classes, anything with theater, music and so on. Without the in person part much of the information is just not learned. Would you want to go to a dentist who learned their skills online?
Silly.
College students have basically no risk, and if we are ever going to get to herd immunity, are the people you would want to get the disease.
Science went out the window awhile ago, now it is just about politics and liability.
There will be no herd immunity, as the antibodies disappear soon after you are well again.
College is a social learning experience that you can’t get online.
Young adults are already failing and angry at life, just hanging out on social media not living in reality, instead of having real friends and experiences, .
They will be doomed for more failure and learn more ways to cheat the system.
They should drop the price 20 to 50 percent, given they suddenly have so little overhead to operate. Otherwise they’re just gonna pocket a bunch of extra profit.
Why don’t you embrace the fact that school will have to return to in class sessions. We need those for labs, social, and mental development for our children.
If YOU ARE afraid, YOU stay home with your kids, but let us, those that can THINK for OURSELVES choose to send our kids to a physical classroom.
By stopping all in person classes, we lose many of the arts, many of the sciences, unless you are going to open up your house to chemical experiments … I am sure you have all the required HEPPA filtrations, hoods, PPE, school only chemicals, etc …
CSU is a rip off! The have the system set up in a way that they can bleed students’ pockets! Students enrolled in a payment plan have to pay a fee even if they ended up not needing such plan because they paid the fees at once. They post payments late to the students’ account so they have an excuse to charge for fees. In addition to tuition, they are charging for Student Body fees, Health Services fees, IRA fee, Facilities fee, University Union fee, Athletic fee, Academic Excellence fee, Student Involvement fee. Students also are overcharged on meal plans so they can eat on campus. Those are fees for services students don’t use nor know that exist!
Might was well just go to University of Phoenix.
Online U Nation.
Defund the brainwashing machine. No to the CSU system ripping the people off. Screw the professors that promote the Anti America agenda.
Parents, if your kid thinks logically, can break a problem down into smaller parts and can problem solve. They can after two years at a local junior college come out with a skill set that will allow them to make a living wage.
Industrial electricians are in short supply.
https://www.losmedanos.edu/eetec/index.aspx
That one lab requirement will be used to keep the foreign students on campus and especially, to ensure those Chinese dollars come rolling in as planned. Just watch.