The Columbus Dispatch

OSU owes me for not getting what I paid for during COVID

- Your Turn Brooke Smith Guest columnist

I have always wanted to be a teacher.

To pursue my dream, I applied and was accepted to Ohio State University, recognized as the premier teaching school in the Midwest.

While Ohio State is more expensive than many other higher education options, I chose to attend because of its reputation for excellence and the hands-on experience­s I knew I would gain with my peers and professors at one of the most resource-rich campuses in the country.

Throughout most of my time at OSU, the investment in myself and my education was intellectu­ally fulfilling and prepared me for life and a career after college. But then in the Spring semester of 2020 the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

I was a senior at the time, getting ready to graduate with a degree in early childhood education and visual impairment education.

Not only did the campus shut down, with all classes switching to a virtual format, but my in-class kindergart­en teaching internship through OSU was also abruptly halted.

I understand the need to take these steps and OSU tried to make the best out of an incredibly difficult situation. However, there is no question that the experience my classmates and I received during that semester was nowhere near what we expected based on the promises made by OSU when we enrolled – nor was it what we had paid for.

Fast forward more than two years, and students who were short changed have still received almost no refunds.

In fact, of the more than $15,000 I paid for that semester — to attend in-person classes, work at my internship, access libraries, computer labs, study rooms, and participat­e in extracurri­cular activities, among other hands-on experience­s — I have received less than $50 back.

That’s why I am the lead plaintiff in a class action

lawsuit for myself and my classmates to recover some of what we paid for instructio­n, services and experience­s we were directly or implicitly promised, but did not receive.

Our hope is that OSU and the office of Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost will engage in an open and honest dialogue with us about our case. So far there’s been an unfortunat­e silence from these two power centers who have the ability to right an obvious wrong.

I have to believe that Yost understand­s that in-person learning is not the same as virtual learning; and I know that OSU’S leadership understand­s this fact, as they’ve returned to robust campus life and worldclass, in-person instructio­n as we’ve gotten past the worst of the pandemic.

I — like many young people — regrettabl­y also understand and have had to contend with this reality. Virtual classes, with no ability to connect beyond the screen, simply didn’t provide the kind of rich, deep experience OSU promoted and promised.

Among other shortcomin­gs forced by the pandemic, without the ability to teach as part of my OSU internship, I was not adequately prepared to be a teacher when I graduated.

Honestly, it’s something even my future kindergart­en students will understand — you deserve to get what you pay for.

Brooke Smith is the lead plaintiff in Smith vs. Ohio State University.

 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/DISPATCH ?? University Hall seen on April 14, 2020, at Ohio State University when it was shut down because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/DISPATCH University Hall seen on April 14, 2020, at Ohio State University when it was shut down because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.
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