Can Colleges Survive Coronavirus? 'The Math Is Not Pretty'
Can Colleges Survive Coronavirus? 'The Math Is Not Pretty'
Heard on All Things Considered
Most campuses in the United
States are sitting empty. Courses are online, students are at home. And
administrators are trying to figure out how to make the finances of that work.
"The math is not pretty," says Robert Kelchen, who
studies higher ed finance at Seton Hall University in New Jersey.
"Colleges are stressed both on the revenue side and on the expenditure
side."
On one end of the equation, colleges are spending money to take
classes online, in some situations purchasing software, training professors or
outsourcing to online-only institutions. That's on top of refunds for room and
board and parts of tuition. On the other side, money isn't coming back in, in the
form of expected tuition and revenue from events such as athletics, conferences
on campus and summer camps. College endowments, which can sometimes offer some
insulation from hard financial times, have also taken a hit.
"This will touch every sector of higher education. Every
size of institution, every region of the country," says Dominique Baker, a
professor of education policy at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.
And
it already has. The University of Michigan estimates it may lose up to $1 billion by the end of the year. For
the University of Kentucky, it's $70 million. Hundreds of schools — including some
with endowments of more than a billion dollars, like Duke University, Virginia
Tech and Brown — have announced hiring freezes. Other institutions have cut pay
and have laid off staff and contractors. In Vermont, state officials have floated potential college shutdown.
Despite the fact that no institution will be spared, says Baker,
the pandemic will affect different institutions in disproportionate ways.
"For some colleges, this is an extensional threat that means they'll have
to close," she says, while others will have the financial backing to
weather the storm. What keeps her up at night? Those institutions that serve
more vulnerable populations and are in more remote or rural places. Because,
she says, they have the potential to feel the financial pain even more. There,
students rely on colleges for services such as health care, campus jobs, child
care and free food. Baker says those places, which have already been largely
underfunded, will be hard-pressed to stay.
The federal government did attempt a buoy: In the CARES relief
package passed in March, Congress allocated about $14 billion for colleges and universities,
though many have said that's not enough. "Woefully inadequate" is what the American
Council on Education called it. The group, along with 40 other higher education
organizations, have lobbied Congress for about $46 billion more. And
that's a conservative ask, they say.
Additional state funding for
higher education also seems unlikely, considering revenues are way down across
the country from an economy on hold. In most states, funding for higher education
isn't constitutionally required, so when states are strapped to balance their
budgets, it's often an easy target. "When state budgets take a hit, higher
ed really takes a hit," says Kelchen. This happened in the last recession,
more than a decade ago, and in many places, state funding for higher education never rebounded.
With less funding, colleges have continued to lean on tuition.
But over the past eight years, college enrollment nationwide has fallen about 11%.
Every sector — public state schools, community colleges, for-profits and
private liberal arts schools — has felt the decline. Over the years,
international students, who often pay full tuition, have helped. But now with
travel restrictions in play, schools are expecting very few of them this fall.
And we're still waiting for
colleges to answer the biggest question: What will the fall look like?
"I don't think there's any scenario under which it's
business as usual on American college campuses in the fall," says Nicholas
Christakis, a sociologist and physician at Yale University who is studying how
the coronavirus spreads. "This idea — that we can somehow just get back to
normal and go back to school in the fall, because we always have, it's not
reasonable, actually. I think we're going to have to figure out other ways of
doing this."
Colleges need to have a contingency plan ready, says Bryan
Alexander, an educational futurist at Georgetown University. The pandemic, he
says, is "going to change things, and the degree depends on the shape of the pandemic in the fall semester."
There are many ways a
reconstructed fall might look, including the option of continuing everything
online, though many colleges that teach in-person still think of that as a last
resort. They cite online learning growing pains and an ambivalent faculty. Plus
there's some fear that students and their families won't be willing to pay as much for an online offering.
Among the ideas being floated for tweaking the in-person model is changing the
traditional academic calendar. Instead of starting in August or September,
school might open in October or even January. Instead of 16-week semesters,
colleges could shift to quarter systems or even shorter, four-week courses to
allow flexibility.
Others have floated a hybrid model, with some smaller classes
remaining in-person and larger classes going online. Kim Weeden, a sociologist
at Cornell, along with colleague Benjamin Cornwell, set out to study this idea using network modeling on enrollment
data on Cornell. She was hoping that if they eliminated large
lecture classes, students would have less interaction with each other. It turns
out, it didn't matter. The close-knit community — often touted as the hallmark
of residential campuses — persisted. The researchers found that tight networks
existed regardless.
"Just eliminating those 100-person or more classes didn't
seem to reduce the small-world nature of the network all that much,"
Weeden says. Their research — which was published recently in a white paper,
but not peer reviewed — was only looking at classes and didn't factor in dorm
life or campus events such as social gatherings and athletics.
"There's just so much uncertainty," says Weeden.
"You know, a big piece of this, of course, is whether there is going to be
[coronavirus] testing available and what those tests can and cannot tell us.
And you know, everybody wants to know the answer to that question."
Still, some colleges will be affected less, says Christakis. He
points to urban campuses or community colleges that have a large number of
commuter students without a residential component. Those schools may be able to
thin out the number of students in a classroom and space out when those classes
are offered, in order to cut down on crowding and adhere to a semblance of
social distancing.
For residential colleges, the question is even harder, since
opening campus is more than just classes — it's students living in close
quarters, often in a dorm. College campuses are also ripe for outbreaks if the
disease doesn't fade, like we've seen happen in the past.
With that risk comes liability. If an outbreak occurred on
campus, could the administration be on the hook for lawsuits?
Still, very few colleges are publicly admitting other options.
Cal State Fullerton announced Monday that it was assuming it would be virtual
in the fall. "Of course that could change," said the school's
provost, Pamella Oliver, in a virtual town hall, "but at this point
that's what we're thinking." Boston University shared that it was making plans
in the event it couldn't reopen come fall, and the story gained worldwide
attention. The school has since backpedaled and clarified,
announcing that "Boston University is planning to resume its on-campus,
residential program in the fall of 2020, following the recommended best health
practices around the coronavirus pandemic."
In an environment with declining enrollments, says Alexander,
schools are competitive. If one school announces plans to remain online,
another might flaunt its gorgeous campus in an attempt to steal away students.
Every student who agrees to enroll matters in this environment, he says, and
higher ed isn't big on working collaboratively.
Planning in the background, without making any public
declarations, seems to be the winning play right now.
"I think we're still 50/50 on whether the fall semester
looks normal," says W. Joseph King, the president of Lyon College, a small
private school in Arkansas. There, he says, his administration is currently
planning two, very different options: the typical residential experience
they've always had, or a totally virtual one. Regardless of what happens,
there's really no scenario, King says, where it doesn't hurt financially.
"We're not in a situation where we've been running a surplus," he
says. The college has long struggled with its endowment and enrollment, but
this spring, he says, was actually shaping up to be pretty good: The number of
students who have committed and sent in deposits is higher than expected.
"But the question is, do those deposits, those intentions
that we've heard so far, ring true to a final decision?" he says, So much
can happen over the summer, especially given how much economic uncertainty and
disruption families are facing. Will students actually be there in the fall?
That's the question every college in America is wondering right now.
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