College kids are ditching dorms for the digital nomad life
Sep 21, 2020 鈥 5 min read
With college courses moving online, more students are trying out the digital nomad lifestyle 漏 damircudic / Getty Images
It was already late July when Johnny Antos, University of California Berkeley Haas business school class of 2022, decided not to sign a lease in Berkeley for the fall semester. Having found out classes would go remote, Antos figured 鈥渢here wasn鈥檛 really any value鈥 in living in the city. So he booked an Airbnb in Lake Tahoe, California, with his partner and her younger sister, a college undergraduate. Their plan is to stay until at least November.
Why Tahoe? 鈥淚 have never been,鈥 says Antos, who鈥檇 been living in New York before starting business school. 鈥淓veryone from the West Coast seems to love it, so it seemed like a good idea.鈥 He鈥檇 ruled out more exotic locales in Hawaii, so as to remain in the same time zone as his classes. Tahoe further appealed because of its infrastructure. A popular tourist destination, the surrounding area would have gas stations and coffee shops, not to mention solid internet access and hiking trails.
Alternatives to on-campus living
With many colleges and universities going either fully or partially remote because of COVID-19, students have been finding alternatives to on-campus living. While some fear inhabiting potential or aim to save on housing by staying with family, others have decided to take advantage of their remote coursework by renting homes in locations perhaps more desirable than their college campuses or parents鈥 houses.
Not all students shared Antos鈥檚 time zone considerations when choosing locations for the semester. As the New York Times , groups of East Coast students from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard booked rentals in Hawaii and Montana, respectively. For many students, the primary concern is maintaining a fulfilling social experience without in-person classes.
Professor Kerry Bowman, who studies medicine and bioethics at the University of Toronto 鈥 where students can choose between physical and virtual lessons 鈥 sees value in these group living situations.
鈥淯niversity is when people meet the largest amount of people and socialize for the first time on a truly adult level,鈥 he says. 鈥淎t least if you鈥檙e sharing a place鈥ou have some of that.鈥
Still, Bowman expected more of his students to take advantage of the university鈥檚 online option. Instead, most wanted a 鈥渘ormal, full university experience, and that involves actually interacting with people,鈥 he says. 老澳门六合彩开奖记录 spoke with several freshmen who鈥檇 opted to live in their college dorms, in spite of classes remaining online, for similar reasons.
School guidelines and house rules
Meanwhile, some colleges have loosened their guidelines on who鈥檚 allowed to live off-campus, driving more undergrads to rent houses with friends close to school. Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina, for example, stopped requiring freshmen and sophomores to live on campus this fall, leaving . At Connecticut College, . Normally, that number is close to zero.
For students not straying far from school, the quality of cheaper rentals tends to improve the further they get from affluent college towns. Charlotte Harris, another first-year student at Berkeley Haas, says housing options in Berkeley are pricey and cramped compared to where she and two classmates ended up moving in North Oakland 鈥 a move she may not have made if she was traveling between campus and home more frequently.
Living with peers during the pandemic also means agreeing on more stringent rules than those typically imposed by housemates. Reducing the spread of COVID-19 is, after all, a much graver concern than eating someone鈥檚 unlabeled yogurt. Detailed 鈥淐OVID safety plans鈥 are common in communal houses, as are mandated quarantines. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all dating,鈥 says Harris, 鈥渂ut none of us can date or exchange germs with more than one person at a time.鈥
Finding roommates and a destination
Antos initially tried to get others from his class excited about living remotely together, but he was met with 鈥渢epid鈥 responses. Eventually, one who expressed interest also wanted to regularly host visitors at the Airbnb, which didn鈥檛 work for Antos. 鈥淲e were hoping this would be a sort of corona bubble,鈥 he says.
The price of Airbnbs in Tahoe kept falling over the summer, so Antos could ultimately afford to split a four-bedroom house close to the lake with just his partner and her sister (his partner works remotely) for around $4,200 a month.
Places like Tahoe also draw students looking for wide-open spaces, which are both more pleasant and less risky during a pandemic that鈥檚 easily spread by people being indoors and in close range of each other. According to the Times, Utah has been a popular destination for virtually learning college students because of the proximity to outdoor activities. Others opted for city living because it鈥檚 not something their suburban colleges normally offer. Some traveled even further.
Matthew Pyskir, a junior at University of Kansas, made the last-minute decision to travel to Lviv, Ukraine, and un-enroll from Kansas for the semester. He鈥檚 now studying at the Ukrainian Catholic University this fall.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to spend so much money on Kansas when it鈥檚 all going to be online,鈥 he says.
In Ukraine, where there are compared to , Pyskir can have a freer student experience. He鈥檚 living alone in an apartment that costs $400 a month, having paid about twice that living close to campus last year.
Pyskir studies Slavic languages and had always wanted to spend a semester abroad. The pandemic presented the right opportunity. Back at University of Kansas, several of Pyskir鈥檚 friends have already contracted the coronavirus.
Pyskir鈥檚 parents still have concerns. 鈥淭hey're scared of me getting sick in Eastern Europe because the hospitals aren't necessarily up to Western standards,鈥 he says. However, when Pyskir鈥檚 dad, who flew with him to get him settled in Lviv, saw how people in the country were so 鈥渃autious and organized鈥 compared to the US, he felt better about his son鈥檚 decision.
COVID-19 has presented students with unparalleled uncertainty. Their housing choices reflect this 鈥 they鈥檙e short-term, and tend to emphasize flexibility. Antos, for one, doesn鈥檛 know if or when his school will resume in-person teaching. If he and his partner are still 鈥渦ntethered鈥 after their Airbnb rental ends in November, they鈥檙e considering other places to stay next. 鈥淲e could do Napa,鈥 he says, 鈥渙r explore some cool new spot we haven鈥檛 been to.鈥
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