On small Maritime campuses, a reopening that for many means a quiet room, alone
SACKVILLE, N.B. — At some of Canada’s smaller universities, academic life is set to resume amid the pandemic. But for many this year, the thrill of arriving on campus will be replaced by long days in a room trying to keep loneliness at bay.
Atlantic Canada’s members of the so-called Maple League of universities — Mount Allison University in Sackville, N.B., St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S. and Acadia University in Wolfville, N.S. — are going further than larger universities in promising in-person classes this fall.
However, for the hundreds of students arriving at the schools, this means self-isolation and questions about what the year ahead will bring in terms of a second wave of COVID-19. In Atlantic Canada, students entering from outside the region must isolate for 14 days.
Jerry Ko, a fourth-year music student at St. Francis Xavier, recently emerged from the two weeks of self-isolation after arriving back in Canada from Hong Kong.