Faculty, students across US hold 'die-ins' to protest return to campus

Student activists across the nation are protesting against in-person instruction.

A common occurrence at these protests is the “die-in,” during which students lie on the ground to symbolize COVID-19 deaths.

As the fall semester approaches, students from universities across the United States are holding protests, marches, and “die-ins” to denounce the return of in-person classes. 

Most American universities are entering the fall semester under a hybrid model of virtual learning and in-person instruction. However, student activists believe that these decisions are motivated by money- not the health and well-being of students.

Protesters are correct in assuming that there are financial consequences for universities moving to only online instruction. Postsecondary institutions across the United States are watching their summer and fall enrollment plummet as they adapt to virtual learning. Many are laying off faculty and cutting budgets by as much as 25 percent.

[RELATED: Yale enrollment down 20 percent after moving online]

Campus Reform previously reported on a “die-in” held at Pennsylvania State University’s main campus. Students held gravestone-shaped signs bearing phrases like “HOW MANY LIVE$?,” alluding to Penn State administrators allegedly choosing profits over students’ safety. 

Another sign said read “one death is too many.”

The students listed their demands, chanted “2, 4, 6, 8, we don’t wanna go back to State,” and laid on the ground for 14 minutes to represent the 140,000 coronavirus-related deaths in the United States up to that point.

More recently, at the University of North Carolina, the “Anti-Racist Grad Worker Collective” hosted a die-in Wednesday afternoon.

[RELATED: HUGE majority of college students say online classes are worse than in-person learning]


Once again, students held signs in the shape of tombstones. One said “academia kills us.” Another said “Tar heel born, COVID dead.”


   
 


One grad student participant called UNC a “fucking death cult” on Twitter. 



   



On Thursday, students and faculty at the University of Georgia held a die-in along the walkway leading to UGA President Jere Morehead’s office. Students held gravestone-shaped signs saying “RIP Campus Safety.”



      



At the University of Oklahoma, students and faculty held a “die-in” in late July to protest that school’s planned return to campus. KFOR-TV captured images of protesters holding signs that read “no deaths for tuition dollar$,” “we are not disposable,” as well as gravestone shaped signs reading “RIP Victim of OU Administration.” 



  



The protests come as polls have shown that the majority of students prefer in-person classes over online courses, but do not trust their universities to protect students if they reopen for the fall. 

A College Pulse poll found that 52 percent of students do not trust schools’ ability to facilitate their safe return to campus. 

In April — when much was still unknown about the lethality of COVID-19 — polls showed that up to 90 percent of college students considered online learning “worse or much worse” than conventional, in-person classes.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @BenZeisloft