2/Pretty much everything about the in-person college experience is a COVID risk.

Parties and campus social activities are some of the highest-risk activities. Simply living in dorms is a pretty big risk. In-person classes are somewhat of a risk as well.
4/Death rates are low for young people, but a lot of them get scary long-term symptoms. (And they can spread it to older people who die.) https://twitter.com/CT_Bergstrom/status/1287994291902545920
9/Another likely reason colleges are going ahead with on-campus student life and in-person classes is that they're afraid that too much distant learning will cause students to wonder why they're paying so much for "Zoom University". https://twitter.com/DivaLaci/status/1283959608864694274
11/So colleges are choosing $$$ over health in the short term. But in the long term they may lose both. Having a lot of kids get sick will reduce parents' trust in universities as stewards of their children's safety. That could accelerate any shift away from traditional college.
14/College towns have been a bright spot in the U.S. economy for decades now, and that could be in danger.

https://eml.berkeley.edu/~moretti/socret.pdf
16/The only real solution to colleges' woes would be a big federal bailout, but with Republicans in charge, that ain't happening.
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