Harvard Announces that All Courses Will Be Online for 2020-2021 Year

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COVID is reaching herd immunity and is not dangerous to the young. This is leftwing panic porn in order to keep the panic going until November election. Pull funding from universities who won’t open. Harvard has been working with the Communist Chinese party.

The good news is Harvard is destroying itself.

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Related: Harvard University Professor and Two Chinese Nationals Charged in Three Separate China Related Cases

Harvard Announces that All Courses Will Be Online for 2020-2021 Year

By: Tom Ciccotta, Breitbart News, 6 Jul 2020110

Harvard University announced on Monday that all of its courses for the 2020-2021 academic year will be held online. Despite all classes reamining online, Harvard has refused to lower its high tuition costs.

According to a press release published on Monday, Harvard University will keep its courses online for the entirety of the 2020-2021 academic year.

Despite the decision to keep courses online, 40 percent of Harvard’s undergraduate student population will be asked to return to campus this fall. All freshman students have been asked to live on campus for the fall semester. However, they will be asked to return home for the spring semester.

After careful deliberation and informed by extensive input from our community, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences announced plans to bring up to 40% of our undergraduates to campus, including all first-year students, for the fall semester. Assuming that we maintain 40% density in the spring semester, we would again bring back one class, and our priority at this time is to bring seniors to campus. Under this plan, first years would return home and learn remotely in the spring. We also will invite back to campus those students who may not be able to learn successfully in their current home learning environment.

Despite the significant changes to the 2020-2021 academic year, Harvard announced that tuition will remain the same. Many Twitter users condemned Harvard over their refusal to reduce tuition.

“So, Harvard decided to have online classes for the 2020-2021 academic school year. But, decided to keep tuition at 50K. This is America ladies and gentlemen,” one Harvard freshman wrote on Twitter.

“They are going to make students pay the same as they would for in person classes. Other universities will follow in their footsteps. Investigate this corruption & clawback the endowments!” another wrote.

https://twitter.com/alexbruesewitz/status/1280187058645078016?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1280187058645078016%7Ctwgr%5E&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.breitbart.com%2Ftech%2F2020%2F07%2F06%2Fharvard-announces-that-all-courses-will-be-online-for-2020-2021-year%2F

The total estimated cost of attendance for one year at Harvard University is $72,559.

https://twitter.com/MaxCRoser/status/1280198802146758659?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1280198802146758659%7Ctwgr%5E&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.breitbart.com%2Ftech%2F2020%2F07%2F06%2Fharvard-announces-that-all-courses-will-be-online-for-2020-2021-year%2F

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livingengine
livingengine
3 years ago

“The total estimated cost of attendance for one year at Harvard University is $72,559.” Hilarious!

Achmed Mohandjob
Achmed Mohandjob
3 years ago
Reply to  livingengine

Beat me to it.

Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
3 years ago
Reply to  livingengine

CEOS AND POLITICIANS WILL PAY THAT EASILY. Too bad cause that money is producing IMBECILES.

SeveredSeclusiveIdiom
SeveredSeclusiveIdiom
3 years ago

Harvard is officially an inclusive and all inclusive idiocy.

Let’s wreck the marxists 2020

felix1999
felix1999
3 years ago

Harvard has become a JOKE!

Princeton is trying to find a middle ground…..They will be inviting select students to return….

Dear members of the Princeton community,

When I wrote to you on May 4th, I said that Princeton was committed to providing the best undergraduate and graduate education consistent with the health and well-being of our community. I also identified a goal that continues to guide our efforts and planning: to restore our on-campus, in-person research and teaching enterprise as soon and as fully as public health principles permit.

Over the last two months, my colleagues and I have been studying the pandemic and identifying measures we can take to accommodate students on campus. COVID-19 is still a very new disease, and much remains unknown about it. Several points have, however, become clear. Based on the information now available to us, we believe Princeton will be able to offer all of our undergraduate students at least one semester of on-campus education this academic year, but we will need to do much of our teaching online and remotely.

First, although New Jersey, which was among the early epicenters of the pandemic in this country, has significantly reduced the incidence and spread of COVID-19, the United States is nowhere close to controlling the disease. Over the past two weeks, new cases have risen sharply in several states. Continued vigilance will be essential throughout the next year, and we should expect waves of infection to occur in the fall and most likely in the spring as well.

Second, COVID-19 appears to spread principally through the inhalation of airborne particles. As a result, the risk of transmission is highest when people are indoors and near one another for extended periods of time. Unfortunately, these conditions exist throughout collegiate life, including in classroom teaching, dormitory living, and communal dining.

Third, New Jersey is reopening carefully and responsibly. Both state law and public health guidance significantly restrict our options for the fall. This guidance presents special challenges for colleges and universities, including Princeton, that provide on-campus housing for nearly all of their students. For example, state law does not currently permit us to operate our dormitories at their full capacity, and it requires us to have adequate quarantine and isolation plans for the students we house. It also stipulates that we must maintain six feet of separation between students attending class. Under these circumstances, it would be pointless if not impossible to invite back all of our undergraduates in the fall term: we could not house them on campus or provide them with a meaningful residential experience.

Fourth, as I noted in my last letter, this pandemic is a long-term crisis. Though scientists throughout the world are working with unprecedented focus to find treatments and vaccines, there is no telling if or when they will succeed. We cannot simply sit on the sidelines and wait it out; we must all find ways to persist through it. For Princeton, that means we must both offer high-quality education remotely and also start working our way back toward residential education now, despite the obstacles that I have mentioned.

We will accordingly employ a model that invites to campus roughly half of Princeton’s undergraduates in each semester, and that offers every undergraduate who is able to return to campus the opportunity to be here for at least one semester. We will welcome the incoming Class of 2024, as well as rising juniors, back to campus in August. In the spring term, we will welcome back our sophomores and our seniors in the graduating Class of 2021.

We will also seek to accommodate a very limited number of other students whose special circumstances require them to be on campus in specific semesters. In the fall term, this will include a small number of seniors, designated by their departments, whose thesis research must be done on campus, meets all COVID-related safety requirements, and has been approved by the relevant principal investigator or faculty adviser and the Dean for Research. We will also accommodate students who face housing insecurity, new transfer students, and ROTC students on campus in the fall.

With regard to athletics programs this fall, the Council of Ivy League Presidents intends to announce a decision regarding intercollegiate athletic activity for fall 2020 on July 8. The Department of Athletics will have more information for varsity athletes at that time.

Because the living and teaching arrangements for Princeton’s graduate programs accommodate social distancing more easily than does our undergraduate program, we will invite all of our graduate students to campus. Graduate-level courses and graduate advising may occur in person or virtually, depending on the decisions of individual graduate programs. We have already begun a phased restart to our research enterprise.

Though we plan to invite every undergraduate student to spend a semester on campus, all undergraduates will have the option to complete the entire year remotely. As students consider their choices, they should bear in mind that the campus experience will be very different from an ordinary year. For example, most undergraduate teaching will be online rather than in person even for on-campus students. Many activities will be unavailable, impermissible, or highly regulated. Parties will be prohibited. Masks will be required in indoor spaces, including in all classrooms, laboratories, and libraries. Social distancing will be the norm. Travel will be limited. We will test students for COVID-19 when they arrive, and we expect to test them regularly thereafter. Isolation will be mandatory for students who test positive for COVID-19; quarantine will be mandatory for students who have been in contact with someone who gets COVID-19.

These restrictions are essential to protect the health of the Princeton community and to comply with New Jersey law. We will expect all members of our campus population to affirm that they understand these constraints and accept the responsibility to abide by them if they come to campus. Undergraduates will be required to sign a social contract describing their responsibilities in this pandemic. Our collective success will depend on all of our individual actions. If students are unwilling or unable to comply with the restrictions described above and in the social contract, they should not come to campus.

To reduce travel that increases both the risk of infection and the need to quarantine, we are planning to alter Princeton’s academic calendar for the 2020-21 academic year. We expect to begin the fall semester two days earlier than previously announced, on August 31; we will convert the fall break to a long weekend; and we will ask all students to leave campus before Thanksgiving. The fall reading period and examinations will be fully remote. We will likewise abbreviate spring break, making it a long weekend to reduce travel during the second semester.

Because most of our teaching will have to be online, we have devoted new resources and planning to enhance our online offerings. Faculty members have been collaborating over the summer with one another, with the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning, and with the Office of Information Technology. They are implementing lessons learned from last spring’s remote learning experience, increasing opportunities for student-faculty interaction, and revamping courses to fit the online environment. We look forward to engaging all of our students, both here on campus and around the world, in a unique and meaningful learning environment.

Despite the restrictions required by public health considerations, we are confident that Princeton will be able to offer an outstanding education to all of its students, whether they are studying on campus or remotely. The University is increasing its investment in both its online and in-person programming in order to address the challenges presented by the pandemic. We recognize, however, that no matter how successful the University’s remote offerings may be, the opportunity to study on campus carries important advantages, including access to campus facilities and peer-to-peer learning opportunities.

Because we anticipate that most undergraduates will have the opportunity to study on campus only for one semester or less, we will discount the University’s full-year undergraduate tuition by ten percent for this academic year. This discount will apply to all undergraduates, regardless of when or whether they are on campus. We will also apply other discounts to the undergraduate fee package, including the pro‑ration of room and board charges for shortened semesters and the elimination of some fees.

I am sure that all of you — students, parents, faculty, and staff — have a range of more detailed questions related to the year ahead. Answers to some of these questions are spelled out on our Fall 2020 website. Others will be shared with you in the days ahead. Still others will require some patience: while we wish it were possible to say that every problem has been solved and every question answered, we are in uncharted territory. There is still much work to be done before the start of the fall semester. The success of our efforts this fall will depend on cooperation from all of you. We ask for your understanding and patience as we work through the myriad details that must be addressed to make the coming year as successful and healthy as possible.

Before I close, I would like to emphasize two important points about the coming year. First, there are no guarantees about what will happen as the semester and the year unfold. The University will continue to reevaluate its plans in the months ahead. If developments allow, we will invite back more students in the spring. Unfortunately, it is also possible that matters will get worse. If so, we may have to send students home in the fall or reduce the size of the anticipated campus population in the spring.

Second, as these cautionary comments make clear, this year will be far from normal, whether students are on campus or not. This pandemic is among the worst crises ever to hit Princeton or college education more broadly. Princeton’s preferred model of education emphasizes in-person engagement, but in-person engagement is what spreads this terrible virus. While I wish that we might return immediately to the kind of campus life that we enjoyed when March 2020 began, this moment imposes different responsibilities upon us. I am grateful to all of you for shouldering those responsibilities together, and for approaching them with creativity, determination, and resilience.

To our students, I look forward to having you back on our campus when you can come. To all of you, I look forward to collaborating with you and supporting you as we pursue our teaching and research mission energetically, imaginatively, and passionately in the face of one of the greatest challenges ever to confront our University.

With best wishes,

Chris Eisgruber
(President of the University)

Christopher L. Eisgruber, Princeton University’s 20th president,
assumed office on July 1, 2013.
http://www.towntopics.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Eisgruber-2.jpg

Michael Goldman
Michael Goldman
3 years ago
Reply to  felix1999

He looks like a dork. A liberal vermin scum dork.

felix1999
felix1999
3 years ago

He’s an absolute idiot. People use these institutions for contacts and networking. NJ state rules, make it a little tough to do that when learning is mostly online or developing a relationship requires being six feet a part with a mask on with no socializing to speak of and no parties!

Michael Goldman
Michael Goldman
3 years ago
Reply to  felix1999

I have a friend who lives there. He went to vote today because he didn’t want to fill out those Illegal paper ballots the governor sent everyone in the mail. There were NO VOTING MACHINES. They gave him a paper thing to fill out again, and had separate ones for Democrat and Republican(which is also illegal). They could just throw the ballots that are Republican in the dumpster. If they try this again in November without machines, the war will start then.

oceanfloor1
oceanfloor1
3 years ago

No it won’t. It should, but it won’t. Maybe a couple years in when enough people begin to realize that 2020 was only a warm up to the kind of catastrophic damage a Biden-and-Otherwise-Unqualified-Woman-Of-Color presidency is capable of unleashing, building on what has been learned about the power of fear, unearned guilt, and chaos to exert political control.

Maybe then. But given this year so far, who knows?

felix1999
felix1999
3 years ago

How many presidents of universities and colleges have met with CCP Xi?

President of Harvard, Lawrence Bacaw, did! It makes me wonder why they are not willing to disclose and cooperate on how much money they have been receiving from China as well as other universities and colleges. One Harvard professor was arrested for working with the Chinese on a virus and not disclosing the money he received from China to do that. I’m just a curious person !
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Michael Goldman
Michael Goldman
3 years ago
Reply to  felix1999

It’s great to be curious, but remember what curiosity killed. democratic scum hate curious people.

oceanfloor1
oceanfloor1
3 years ago
Reply to  felix1999

Plenty of Chinese nationals and muttered complaints in the hallways about Chinese government interference at Harvard School of Public Health back in the late 20th century. Doubt that’s changed.

felix1999
felix1999
3 years ago

YES!

Harvard Announces 100% Virtual Classes For Students Both On and Off Campus –
ICE Announces Exchange Students No Longer Qualify For Visas…

Posted on July 6, 2020 by sundance

MASSACHUSETTS – “In addition to freshmen, Harvard will host as many students who “must be on campus to progress academically” this fall as it can without exceeding the 40 percent threshold. All courses will be taught virtually for students both on and off campus.”

Additionally, Harvard will not be making any adjustments to their tuition rates.

A few hours later U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced any foreign student who attends a U.S. university with only virtual classes will lose their student visa.

ICE Announcement – […] Nonimmigrant F-1 and M-1 students attending schools operating entirely online may not take a full online course load and remain in the United States.

The U.S. Department of State will not issue visas to students enrolled in schools and/or programs that are fully online for the fall semester nor will U.S. Customs and Border Protection permit these students to enter the United States.

Active students currently in the United States enrolled in such programs must depart the country or take other measures, such as transferring to a school with in-person instruction to remain in lawful status. If not, they may face immigration consequences including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceedings. (more)
https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/sevp-modifies-temporary-exemptions-nonimmigrant-students-taking-online-courses-during

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2020/07/06/harvard-announces-100-virtual-classes-for-students-both-on-and-off-campus-ice-announces-exchange-students-no-longer-qualify-for-visas/#more-196166

oceanfloor1
oceanfloor1
3 years ago

Got a masters degree from Harvard’s “Extension” night school in the 90s for +/- $6,000 total. Full professors, great courses, same coursework, thesis, graduation, diploma. Probably lots more now but still not 200 grand for online. The level of sanity found at University of Phoenix probably makes it a better value, but you’ll never convince parents who think “Hah-vud” is key to their kid’s success no matter what kind of pernicious woke tranny Marxist-intersectionalist poison will be poured into their brains. Next thing they know their snowflake turns up in Antifa drag in a video on CNN pulling down John Harvard’s statue in the quad because he must have done something “racist”…

Public_Citizen
Public_Citizen
3 years ago
Reply to  oceanfloor1

Since Harvard was founded on a religious based curriculum the Marxists won’t have to look very far to find things to exert their faux-outrage against.

Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
3 years ago

SO MANY MORE IMBECILES GRADUATING FROM HARVARD………good luck looking for someone intelligent these days to work for you!

SO, IT IS NOT WHAT YOU KNOW NOW, BUT WHERE YOU LEARNED NOTHING, FROM, HUH? I paid for my college, course by course and had one of the BEST jobs ever before I retired in 2010. Community College, 2+2 program. I was being CALLED for job interviews ALL THE TIME.

Businesses now do NOT want to pay a person affiliated with a college like Harvard. My boss had to fire a guy from a well-known college. He couldn’t spell. And, he didn’t know how to form a complete sentence. THAT IS WHAT THOSE WELL-KNOWN COLLEGES ARE PRODUCING.

Find someone LOCAL who worked their way thru college. THOSE ARE THE VALUABLE PEOPLE!

Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
3 years ago

SO MANY MORE IMBECILES GRADUATING FROM HARVARD………good luck looking for someone intelligent these days to work for you!

SO, IT IS NOT WHAT YOU KNOW NOW, BUT WHERE YOU LEARNED NOTHING, FROM, HUH? I paid for my college, course by course and had one of the BEST jobs ever before I retired in 2010. Community College, 2+2 program. I was being CALLED for job interviews ALL THE TIME.

Businesses now do NOT want to pay a person affiliated with a college like Harvard. My boss had to fire a guy from a well-known college. He couldn’t spell. And, he didn’t know how to form a complete sentence. THAT IS WHAT THOSE WELL-KNOWN COLLEGES ARE PRODUCING.

Find someone LOCAL who worked their way thru college. THOSE ARE THE VALUABLE PEOPLE!

Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
3 years ago

SO MANY MORE IMBECILES GRADUATING FROM HARVARD………good luck looking for someone intelligent these days to work for you!

SO, IT IS NOT WHAT YOU KNOW NOW, BUT WHERE YOU LEARNED NOTHING, FROM, HUH? I paid for my college, course by course and had one of the BEST jobs ever before I retired in 2010. Community College, 2+2 program. I was being CALLED for job interviews ALL THE TIME.

Businesses now do NOT want to pay a person affiliated with a college like Harvard. My boss had to fire a guy from a well-known college. He couldn’t spell. And, he didn’t know how to form a complete sentence. THAT IS WHAT THOSE WELL-KNOWN COLLEGES ARE PRODUCING.

Find someone LOCAL who worked their way thru college. THOSE ARE THE VALUABLE PEOPLE!

Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
Liberalism_IS_INSANITY
3 years ago

SO MANY MORE IMBECILES GRADUATING FROM HARVARD………good luck looking for someone intelligent these days to work for you!

SO, IT IS NOT WHAT YOU KNOW NOW, BUT WHERE YOU LEARNED NOTHING, FROM, HUH? I paid for my college, course by course and had one of the BEST jobs ever before I retired in 2010. Community College, 2+2 program. I was being CALLED for job interviews ALL THE TIME.

Businesses now do NOT want to pay a person affiliated with a college like Harvard. My boss had to fire a guy from a well-known college. He couldn’t spell. And, he didn’t know how to form a complete sentence. THAT IS WHAT THOSE WELL-KNOWN COLLEGES ARE PRODUCING.

Find someone LOCAL who worked their way thru college. THOSE ARE THE VALUABLE PEOPLE!

PlatinumGhost
PlatinumGhost
3 years ago

Under the new guidelines by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which oversees the U.S. Student and Exchange Visitor Program, foreigners with F-1 or M-1 visas — which are for academic and vocational international students, respectively — will not be allowed to participate in an entirely online fall semester.

Students already in the U.S. under those programs who are planning to attend colleges or universities that will only offer online classes in the fall will need to transfer to other schools providing in-person instruction, depart the country or face potential deportation, ICE said. If they leave the U.S., the students will be able to continue the remote instruction in their home countries.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ice-foreign-students-online-only-classes/

CARRENO  BARTOX
CARRENO BARTOX
3 years ago

Today’s HARVARD is one of the multiple PROSTITUTES in USA working for the Chinese-Communist-Party-PIMP

caschmid@centurytel.net
3 years ago

I took the red pill.

IAMARICK
IAMARICK
3 years ago

…but the prices won’t change.

Public_Citizen
Public_Citizen
3 years ago

Which means all their foreign students get to go home and stay there to take their classes. Chinese aren’t going to like that. Their government ‘sponsored’ malware is going to play havoc with certain course material, and their ‘student’ spies won’t be able to engage in much spycraft. Of course, I’m sure that’s a good part of the reason for drafting the order for the foreign students to stay home.

Jan Favre
Jan Favre
3 years ago

Does not matter. Their main teachings are cultural Marxist propaganda. A waste of brain.

CNN sucks!
CNN sucks!
3 years ago
Reply to  Jan Favre

The irony of the student debt is that they got themselves into unrealistic debt, to learn how to be a socialist, lol.

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