The Arizona Republic

GCU pushes back start date for in-person classes

- Helena Wegner

Both Grand Canyon University and Maricopa County Community College District announced major schedule changes ahead of the upcoming fall semester due to concerns about the spread of COVID-19, university officials announced in a statement.

The announceme­nts come after Arizona experience­d a spike in confirmed COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations in recent weeks.

Grand Canyon University

The university originally planned to start classes Aug. 24 but has since pushed back in-person classes to Sept. 28 to give Arizona time to reduce COVID-19 cases, according to the statement.

Students will start courses Sept. 8 and spend the first three weeks of school online until transition­ing to in-person classes.

“Starting the semester online will help students get off to a positive start academical­ly as they can devote their complete focus to their studies during those three weeks before getting acclimated to life on a college campus,” the university wrote.

But if COVID-19 cases take a “catastroph­ic turn for the worse,” the university will switch to online classes.

For students, the semester will include an in-person “physically distant blended model of instructio­n” until the end of the semester, Dec. 18, which runs one week longer than normal.

The university pointed out that a September start date will bring cooler weather and allow for more opportunit­ies to have classes, activities and events outside.

Some students will arrive at campus earlier than the in-person start date. This includes athletes who were scheduled to start their workouts in August for the upcoming season and student leaders who arrive to campus Sept. 4 for training.

Nursing students with clinical placements already scheduled may have an earlier start date too, but they will receive more informatio­n at a later time.

Students living on campus will have their housing costs reduced proportion­ally to the late move-in dates.

Residentia­l move-ins begin Sept. 21, the university said.

Meal plans will also be reduced to make up for the shortened period of time students will be on campus.

Additional­ly, the university will offer all eligible students attending the fall semester approximat­ely $500 from the university’s portion of the CARES Act fund.

Grand Canyon University was allotted $22.3 million from the economic stimulus bill passed by Congress in March.

The university paid 50% of the allotment to students during the spring 2020 semester and, instead of using the remaining $11.18 million for university expenses as the law allows, the school will give $500 grants to eligible students for the fall semester.

MCCCD delays staff and faculty start date

Maricopa County Community College District halted most staff and faculty from returning to campuses across their 10 schools until Oct. 5, according to a statement from Steven Gonzales, the college’s interim chancellor.

Gonzales said a limited number of staff may return Aug. 3 to provide academic support services.

The Chancellor’s Executive Committee will review fall course schedules July 22 and develop guidelines for classes that can be taken in-person or hybrid.

The fall semester is set to begin Aug. 22, according to MCCCD’s academic calendar.

MCCCD is one of the largest two-year schools in the nation and serves more than 200,000 students. Its member schools include campuses at ChandlerGi­lbert, Estrella Mountain, GateWay, Glendale, Mesa, Paradise Valley, Phoenix, Rio Salado, Scottsdale and South Mountain.

 ?? MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC ?? Grand Canyon University has pushed back the start of in-person classes to Sept. 28. Students will start courses online Sept. 8.
MARK HENLE/THE REPUBLIC Grand Canyon University has pushed back the start of in-person classes to Sept. 28. Students will start courses online Sept. 8.

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