I also tried to install the regular Windows 10 version to make sure it was not a problem with the education version. The Windows version I am trying to download is the Windows Education Version found here. To make sure the problem was because I wanted more storage than Boot Camp could allow, I tried setting the Windows size to 60GB, and it still gave me the error. However, at the end, it showed that The volume /dev/rdisk1 appears to be OK. The output showed that there are 3 snapshots, and after the first one it showed this warning: warning: snapshot fsroot tree corruptions are not repaired they'll go away once the snapshot is deleted. I then rebooted into regular macOS and ran sudo fsck_apfs -n -l /dev/rdisk1. I got an error that said "Error: Container /dev/rdisk1 is mounted". It said to reboot using Single-User mode ( ⌘+S), but my computer has the T2 Chip, so I then rebooted my computer with macOS Recovery ( ⌘+R) again, made sure the Macintosh HD volume was mounted, opened Terminal in macOS Recovery, and ran /sbin/fsck -fy. I then researched more about the problem, and I found a solution that seemed to work for many people. I then rebooted to normal macOS and tried again to run Boot Camp Assistant, and I had the same problem. First Aid and Disk Utility in macOS Recovery did not give any error. Rebooted my Mac in macOS Recovery ( ⌘+R), and ran First Aid on all my Volumes, Container, and Disk. I tried many things, and I am still having the problem. While trying to install it, I got an error in Boot Camp Assistant saying that my disk could not be partitioned. I purchased a 2020 13in MacBook Pro about a week ago, and today I tried installing Windows using Boot Camp for school related reasons.
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