Harvard students were given five days’ notice to evacuate from their campus accommodations before their spring break, after which the campus will remain closed until further notice. Some students are panicking about where they’re going to live.

Foto: A student wearing a mask walks through the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: Business Insider


Harvard University, which costs about $46,000 a year to attend, is one of several major colleges and universities across the US are shifting to remote classes to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Foto: Gordon Hall at the Quadrangle of Harvard Medical School. Source: ThePhotosite/Shutterstock

Source: Business Insider, Harvard University


Harvard is in Massachusetts, which declared a state of emergency on Tuesday. As of Friday, there are over 100 confirmed cases in the state.

Foto: Source: Google Maps

Source: Business Insider


Harvard has 10,000 international students from 155 countries. While students can apply to stay on campus, and applications will be considered for certain circumstances like international students from a country that the CDC says to avoid traveling to …

Foto: Students carry boxes to their dorms at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Crimson, Harvard International Office


... there are no automatic exemptions, and the university said it is only reviewing "a small number of applications by students seeking to remain on campus."

Foto: Students carry boxes to their dorms at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Gazette


There are more than 36,000 students at Harvard. 15% of those enrolled in the undergraduate program are first-generation students, while more than 20% are on full financial aid.

Foto: The statue of John Harvard sits in Harvard Yard at Harvard University on Aug. 13, 2019. Source: Associated Press

Source: The Harvard Gazette


Some Harvard students say they can't afford to get home, they don't have a place to go, or they rely on income from employment at Harvard.

Foto: Students and pedestrians walk through the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Crimson


"The only equalizer at Harvard is the fact that we all live together and have the same accommodation," Nick Wyville, a student, told the Harvard Crimson, the student newspaper. "We live together, we eat the same food, we have the same faculty resources ..."

Foto: A man walks through a gate to the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. The student quoted is not pictured. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

"... but if you take away campus living and residential life then you take away that equalizer," Wyville continued.

Foto: A man walks between buildings at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. The student quoted is not pictured. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Another student, Tomasz Wojtasik, said he was kicked out of his parents' home because of his sexuality a year ago. Wojtasik told Insider he doesn't know where he'll go. "I barely kept from crying," he said.

Foto: A student carries a box to her dorm at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. The student quoted is not pictured. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: Business Insider


"I've managed for the past summer and winter break, but now I have five days to figure out what I'm going to do," Wojtasik continued.

Foto: Students and pedestrians walk through the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. The student quoted is not pictured. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: Business Insider


Aside from finances and finding a place to go, some students also worry about how they'll do course work from their remote locations.

Foto: A woman carrying a box walks past a gate to the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Crimson


Some students live in rural communities with limited internet access, while others live in different time zones. "Let's say I have to go back to Japan. That means its a 13 hour time difference. When you guys are taking the actual session, I should be sleeping," student Satoshi Yanaizu told the Crimson.

Foto: Students carry boxes to their dorms at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Crimson, The Harvard Crimson, Business Insider


Daniel Lobo, the president of the First Generation Harvard Alumni Group, started a GoFundMe to help students displaced by Harvard's response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Foto: A woman walks through a gate to the Yard at Harvard University on March 10, 2020. Source: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Source: Insider


Harvard received an endowment of $49.3 billion in 2019, and people have criticized the university for not doing more to help students in need. Donors specify the purpose of about 80% of Harvard's endowment funds, according to the school website.

Foto: A student stands in the entranceway of a building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Nov. 16, 2012. Source: Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters

Source: Insider


Harvard will reimburse travel costs home to students receiving financial aid or with a $0 parental contribution.

Foto: The shiny toe of the John Harvard Statue is seen in Harvard Yard at Harvard University in Cambridge, on Massachusetts Nov.16, 2012. Source: Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters

Source: Harvard University


Harvard is also giving students with financial aid up to $200 to ship their belongings home or $200 in credit to a storage facility.

Foto: Students can choose to ship their belongings home or store them in Cambridge. Source: Getty Images

Source: Harvard University


The Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences extended all major academic due dates by one week to give students time to adjust.

Foto: A student stands in the entranceway of a building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Nov. 16, 2012. Source: Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters

Source: The Harvard Gazette

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