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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Neal Earley

Coronavirus disrupting study-abroad programs for some Illinois students

Tourists wearing a protective mask walk in St. Peter’s sSquare at the Vatican in Rome on Tuesday. Though Italy has urged tourists spooked by the coronavirus not to stay away, but Illinois universities with students studying in Italy have either required or recommended that they return home. | Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

Several Illinois universities are ending study-abroad programs and bringing students home amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Programs in Italy and South Korea are among those affected, as the U.S. State Department now is advising people to reconsider traveling to those countries.

That same advisory, issued Feb. 29, says that travelers definitely should avoid the northern Italian regions of Lombardy and Veneto.

The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Loyola University and Northwestern University have told their students studying there to leave, as the country faces a growing outbreak of coronavirus.

Loyola, which has a campus in Rome, told all students to return home by Wednesday. In a letter, Michael F. Andrews, director of the school’s Rome Center, wrote: “While we realize that there will be a disruption in our students’ academic semester, we are making plans to create a positive alternative learning experience.”

The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign told its 137 students studying in Italy this semester they must leave the country at the “earliest opportunity,” and those who return to campus must “self-isolate” before doing so. U of I also told its 15 students in South Korea to leave that country.

Robin Kaler, a spokeswoman for U of I, said the university is offering to help pay for students return trip home, including students in countries not yet severely affected by the Coronavirus. Kaler said the goal is to give students studying abroad the option to return to campus in time to register for some spring semester courses.

“This is a fluid situation,” Kaler said. “If things change in a few weeks it will be too late for any student to pick up any second eight-week course.”

The University of Illinois Chicago’s study abroad program in South Korea was canceled last week before its three students bound for the country had left. The University had two students in Italy this semester; one returned home Monday, according to Sherri McGinnis Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for UIC.

Northwestern said in a statement on its website the two students studying abroad in Italy have already returned home.

Illinois State University has issued a “strong recommendation” to its 15 students in Italy to leave the country, said spokesman Eric Jome.

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