Los Angeles Times

Omicron ‘havoc’ at community colleges

Re “Undergradu­ates are ‘continuing to sit out in droves,’ ” Jan. 14

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Those of us who teach at the community colleges are very concerned about the low enrollment reported in your piece on undergradu­ates staying home.

We planned the coming spring semester back in September and October, as we do every year. People were getting their booster shots, and the Delta wave of the COVID-19 pandemic seemed to be waning. We were asked to schedule on-campus classes.

Could we do it safely? Would students be happy to return at last? We hoped so. We scheduled more in-person classes and fewer online ones.

Clearly, with Omicron causing havoc, the majority of students are not ready to return to on-campus classes.

In Januarys past, our spring classes would be filling up nicely. Now, some classes have as few as one student registered. Those with low enrollment will be canceled, leaving students to scramble for other possibilit­ies. Senior instructor­s may have to “bump” part-timers from their classes, and the bumped instructor­s will be unemployed.

Soon we will begin planning what to offer for the summer and fall sessions. Should we have more online classes? Will there be another variant throwing this all into disarray? Your guess is as good as mine.

Leslee Koritzke, Altadena The writer is a professor of psychology at Los Angeles Trade Technical College.

The decline in undergradu­ate enrollment nationwide is not the disaster it seems.

A recent study by the Manhattan Institute found that the top 25% of those with only a high school diploma earned more on average than the bottom 25% of college graduates. It’s high time to acknowledg­e that a college degree is no assurance of a wellpaying job.

Walt Gardner Los Angeles The writer taught for 28 years in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? NATIONALLY, undergradu­ate college enrollment dropped 3.1% in fall 2021 from a year earlier. Above, a freshman at Los Angeles City College on Aug. 30.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times NATIONALLY, undergradu­ate college enrollment dropped 3.1% in fall 2021 from a year earlier. Above, a freshman at Los Angeles City College on Aug. 30.

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