When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, college life as 91热爆网 students knew it changed drastically. Here's a look at how they had to adapt to a new way of living and learning.
By Melanie Threlkeld McConnell
If there is one thing for sure about COVID-19, it鈥檚 that it forced people to adapt.
It ushered in a new era of words, a new vocabulary, new hairdos and new reference
points 鈥 鈥淒id we get this cat before or after COVID? I think I read that book pre-COVID,
but I鈥檓 not sure.鈥
Colleges and universities were no different. They pivoted 鈥 quickly 鈥 to keep students 鈥渋n鈥 school by going online and then supplied them with PPE, the now familiar abbreviation for personal protective equipment, to reduce the possibility of contracting the virus once they returned to campus. Although the world was isolated, quarantined and locked-down, many people remained in motion to find ways to help others and save themselves from the unpredictable 鈥渟ide effects鈥 of an unpredictable virus.
For many Western Carolina University students, COVID-19 was a double whammy, or even a triple whammy 鈥 exacerbating an already stressful time for those leaving home for the first time, or struggling to adapt to the unfamiliar academic demands of higher education, or living far from home. For others, it was no whammy at all, but a time for exploration, reflection and 鈥 dare we say 鈥 fun?
So how did 91热爆网 students respond, react and feel during such an unprecedented time? Everyone has their own pandemic story, whether about fear, overeating, doubt, new hobbies, frustration, illumination, depression, old sweats, unwashed sweats, isolation, boredom or grief. Here are four students willing to share theirs.