
By DANIEL CAUDILL
Kansas News Service
A few weeks ago, University of Kansas senior Fatimah Alsinan was in a workshop finishing the last design and construction projects for her architecture degree.
Now, sheâs meeting with classmates online, reviewing premade blueprints and building projects with KâNex and Legos at her apartment.
âWe donât really have a clear idea of what (we are) doing in the future at all,â Alsinan said.
College students across Kansas and the rest of the nation are in a similar boat, trying to stay on track with classes while the COVID-19 outbreak brings everything to a halt.
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly issued a statewide stay-at-home order at the end of March, coordinating social distancing efforts across each of the stateâs 105 counties. She also ordered K-12 schools closed until at least next school year.

Kansasâ universities moved classes mostly online for the rest of the school year, and pushed graduation ceremonies, a celebratory cap on years of hard work, to the Internet or postponed them.
But attending a later graduation ceremony is simply not an option for many international students like Alsinan, whoâs originally from Saudi Arabia.
âMaybe it makes sense for so many people because they live in the next state, or two states away. But Iâm not gonna come from the other side of the world with my family to attend graduation for three days,â she said. âIâll need to make a whole new visa to actually come.â
Students whoâll be at out-of-state grad schools by then, like Fort Hays State senior Kaytee Wisley, likely wonât get to walk across the stage for their big moment, either.
âI didnât realize how much that that had meant to me until we got the email that it was going to be postponed or canceled,â Wisley said.
Wisleyâs internship with the League of Women Voters of Kansas was cut short because of coronavirus shutdowns. She said the internship was integral to her plans after grad school, when she hopes to work for a nonprofit to advocate for voting rights.

Keeping the community
Many students, especially those from another country, are still separated from their family. Alsinan, who hasnât been back to Saudi Arabia in nearly three years, has gotten used to not seeing them.
âThe one thing that would make me miss my family more is that I canât even see my friends,â she said.
Itâs why some university officials are doing their part to make students feel supported and connected at a distance. Alicia Sanchez, director of Wichita Stateâs Office of Diversity and Inclusion, said she has always aimed to make her office a âhome away from homeâ for students. And even if COVID-19 is keeping students locked in their real homes, Sanchez said that effort has not stopped â only changed.
The office has taken to hosting video âwebinars,â including one for Transgender Day of Visibility in March. It also plans to set up virtual office hours.
âOne of the things in our physical space that we pride ourselves on is being able to provide connections,â Sanchez said. âWe feel like this is really important right now, especially for students who might feel isolated or need an opportunity to connect and just step away from, ya know, their academics for a little bit and be able to engage with their peers.â
And business must go on, as Wisley learned. As a member of her schoolâs student government, the group had to have an emergency meeting to allocate 2020-21 student fees for campus organizations.
âWe absolutely had to get those passed before we left or else â we didnât know how to do that via Zoom,â she said.
âOvercoming adversityâ
Navigating video-conferencing software like Zoom is a major challenge in online learning, especially for students who donât have high-speed internet at home. Universities are trying to help bridge that gap by providing them mobile hotspots.
Josh Wolf isnât a professional educator just yet. The K-State senior is a student-teacher whoâs been helping to create online coursework for a seventh grade social studies class at Eisenhower Middle School in Manhattan.

Needless to say, heâs had an unusual first teaching experience. But he said he thinks itâll ultimately make him a better teacher.
âI donât know necessarily if Iâm ever gonna have to teach an online class again,â he said, âbut I think the lessons to be learned about overcoming adversity in an education setting definitely is something valuable to me.â
As someone whoâs preparing to enter the workforce, he said he has some anxiety. In March alone, nearly 10 million Americans filed for unemployment; Kansas reported a 1,000% increase in claims just in the third week of March.
But Wolfâs keeping a positive mindset, for himself and for his students.
âYou know, even if it takes a little bit, even if it is a rough and a little bit of a scary period,â he said, âI know and I believe that ultimately we will overcome all of this.â
Daniel Caudill is a Statehouse intern for the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @byDanielCaudill. The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on the health and well-being of Kansans, their communities and civic life.




