The Atlantic

America Will Sacrifice Anything for the College Experience

The pandemic has revealed that higher education was never about education.
Source: Bettmann / Getty

American colleges botched the pandemic from the very start. Caught off guard in the spring, most of them sent everyone home in a panic, in some cases evicting students who had nowhere else to go. School leaders hemmed and hawed all summer about what to do next and how to do it. In the end, most schools reopened their campuses for the fall, and when students returned, they brought the coronavirus along with them. Come Labor Day, 19 of the nation’s 25 worst outbreaks were in college towns, including the University of Mississippi in Oxford, Iowa State in Ames, and the University of Georgia in Athens. By early October, the White House Coronavirus Task Force estimated that as many as 20 percent of all Georgia college students might have become infected.

Who’s to blame for the turmoil? College leaders desperate to enroll students or risk financial collapse; students, feeling young and invincible, who were bound to be dumb and throw parties; red-state governments and boards that pressured universities to reopen.

But ordinary Americans also bear responsibility. They didn’t just want classes to resume in person—they wanted to return to normal. By one , more than two-thirds of students wanted to head back to their colleges. Even parents still packed bags and road-tripped across the country to drop them off at school. When some colleges moved to Zoom, . More than 100 colleges, both private (Brown, Duke) and public (Rutgers, North Carolina), for tuition refunds. You can understand why. It almost $60,000 per year to attend Brown, and that’s

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