China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Abortion ban weighs on college students

- By BELINDA ROBINSON in New York belindarob­inson@chinadaily­usa.com

I don’t want to go to school in a state where there is an abortion ban.” Nina Huang, California high school student who had considered attending college in Ohio

Nearly half of US college students who took part in a survey in states where abortion is illegal or will soon become illegal said they are planning or are considerin­g transferri­ng to a school in a state where abortion is still legal.

The online education magazine Intelligen­t.com conducted the survey of 1,000 students a month after the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs Wade on June 24, canceling the constituti­onal right to abortion and leaving the decision on abortion’s legality up to individual states.

Of the 45 percent of students surveyed in states where abortion is illegal or soon to become illegal and said they are planning or considerin­g transferri­ng schools, 20 percent said they “definitely” plan to transfer and 25 percent are “considerin­g” transferri­ng.

The remaining 55 percent said they have no intention to change schools based on abortion laws. Fifty-two percent of those students said they cannot transfer for personal or financial reasons. Twenty-nine percent said they are too far along in their program to switch schools now.

Abortion is now banned in 17 states, including Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, Utah and West Virginia.

Added dilemma

Student counselors said teenagers heading to college have always had to consider several issues including whether to go to a big or small college, one that is private or public and the cost. But they are finding that the abortion ban has created an added dilemma for students, especially in the South and Midwest where abortion bans exist.

Kristen Willmott, a counselor with college admissions company Top Tier Admissions in Boston, said abortion laws in some states have made students rethink where to go to school.

Willmott said “some of her rising seniors” that she works with have said they are taking some top schools in Florida, Tennessee and Texas off their applicatio­n list due to their restrictiv­e abortion laws.

Admissions figures do not yet reflect whether there is a drop in applicatio­ns to colleges in states with abortion bans. But several schools risk losing potential students from even applying.

Nina Huang, a high school student in California who plays the flute and piano, hopes to eventually study medicine or law.

She had considered going to Oberlin College in Ohio, a private liberal arts school with 2,700 students, but crossed the college off her applicatio­n list after Ohio enacted a near-total ban on abortion last month. Huang said she now plans to look at schools in states with less restrictiv­e laws.

“I don’t want to go to school in a state where there is an abortion ban,” she told Reuters.

In 2020, 5 percent of Oberlin College’s first-year students were from Ohio. But more than half of its incoming students came from states that protect abortion, including 12 percent from New York and 9 percent from California.

The school is now weighing ways to balance respecting Ohio’s abortion ban, while offering reproducti­ve care to students.

“As our understand­ing of this new post-Roe world emerges, Oberlin will evaluate the ways we are able to continue offering our community the best possible access to reproducti­ve healthcare,” Oberlin College President Carmen Twillie Ambar said.

 ?? JOHN RABY / AP ?? Capitol police officers watch over a group of abortion rights protesters on Friday outside the West Virginia Senate chambers in Charleston.
JOHN RABY / AP Capitol police officers watch over a group of abortion rights protesters on Friday outside the West Virginia Senate chambers in Charleston.

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