They wanted to experience college life, but their universities sent them home to learn from online classes during the coronavirus crisis. Now, students across the United States are taking legal action against over 20 colleges and universities. They want the schools to return part of the money they paid for tuition, meal plans and housing costs. The students say they are not getting the quality of education they were promised. The cases show students’ growing dissatisfaction with online courses that schools hurried to create as the coronavirus forced college campuses to close. The students say they should pay lower tuition rates for the part of the term that was offered on the internet. They argue that the quality of education is far below the classroom experience. However, college officials reject the idea that students are owed refunds. Students are learning from the same professors who teach on campus, officials say. And the students are still earning credits toward their education.

Based on this article, what is a meal plan?
a pre-paid account for on-campus meals during college
vending machines on college campuses
a grocery budget
when people hoard food
How many colleges and universities are targeted for legal action?
20
10
15
6
Students argue that the quality of online education is far below the classroom experience.
the same as the classroom
far below the classroom experience
unknown
far superior than the classroom