|
|
The views expressed on this page are
solely
those of the author and do not
necessarily represent the views of County
News Online
|
Dreamstime
NPR Ed
Colleges Add More In-Person Classes For Spring, Amid High Risk Of Coronavirus Spread
Elissa Nadworny
February 3, 2021
Last week, Ayiana Davis Polen finally set foot on the campus of Spelman
College — a historically Black liberal arts school for women in
Atlanta. She's a freshman there but had started her college experience
last fall taking classes from her bedroom in Puerto Rico.
Back then, she wasn't sure if it felt like college — but then again, she had nothing to compare it with.
Now, she's about to. Spelman, like many colleges across the U.S., is
beefing up its in-person offerings for the spring semester. For Davis
Polen, that meant there was a spot for her in a dorm on the picturesque
campus.
"It's pretty nice," she said Friday, as she settled into her single
room. "I definitely feel the difference, because there's new people all
around me. Obviously it's going to have certain restrictions, but I
think I'll start to get an idea of college."
More than a quarter of colleges are offering in-person components this
spring, according to new data from the College Crisis Initiative, or
C2i, published in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Smaller
institutions are more likely to be in person, as are private four-year
colleges. Public universities and community colleges are much more
likely to be online. The data show that about 40% of colleges are
primarily online this spring, though about 25% of schools in the data
set are listed as "undetermined."
"There is a trend towards more in person, but the majority of changes
we're seeing are in the margins," explains Christopher Marsicano, who
leads the team at C2i and is an assistant professor at Davidson College
in North Carolina, where C2i is based. "We are not seeing many
institutions go from fully online to fully in person."
Instead, he says, colleges are keeping some classes remote but are
trying to have more in-person offerings. "Because that's what students
want and that's where the demand is."
Delaying the start
About 200 colleges have delayed the beginning of in-person classes,
according to the new data. In North Carolina, several universities,
including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and
Appalachian State University, started the semester online, with plans
to begin in-person classes several weeks later. Both universities cite
high levels of coronavirus spread in their communities for this delay.
"Delays are a fantastic tool to try to keep students safe," says
Marsicano. "We know that students coming to campus spread COVID-19. We
also know that COVID-19 numbers are the worst they've been in a long
time right now."
And despite the best attempts to maintain a bubble over a campus, there
is research to suggest that colleges aren't insular. In the fall,
through genomic sequencing, Paraic Kenny and Craig Richmond discovered
links between the coronavirus infecting college students in La Crosse,
Wis., and patients in nearby nursing homes.
"If you get a lot of cases on the college campus, transfer to nursing
homes can occur and it can occur very, very quickly," says Kenny, a
cancer biologist and director of the Kabara Cancer Research Institute.
By the end of last year, 33 deaths in La Crosse nursing home facilities
were found to be linked with the same virus strain that was circulating
on the local college campuses at the start of the semester.
It is extremely difficult to separate campus life from the broader
community, Kenny says: "There are a lot of bars downtown, and the
students go to the bars. Students need to eat, so they go to the
supermarket. Students have lungs, so students breathe. If you have
lungs, you can get the coronavirus. And if you have lungs, you can
catch the coronavirus."
Lockdowns and high case counts
And indeed, campuses have already seen high numbers of cases among students returning for the new semester.
The University of California, Berkeley is seeing a "surge in confirmed
COVID-19 cases among students." The College of Charleston in South
Carolina announced concerns that "large, non-socially distanced,
unmasked gatherings" were contributing to high levels of spread on
campus. At the University of Richmond in Virginia, the return of
students two weeks ago brought "a disturbing uptick" in positive cases.
Much of that spread was happening among students living off campus,
which caused the university to restrict off-campus students to remote
classes until Feb. 8.
"Whenever COVID-19 numbers get higher, any intervention that stops
student mobility, that stops students from going from point A to point
B, is going to help keep those cases down," explains Marsicano. Last
fall, several colleges implemented lockdowns under which students could
leave their homes or dorms only for essentials, like getting groceries
or going to class. Research has shown that transmission is far less
likely to happen in a masked, socially distanced classroom than off
campus at large gatherings or among students living together.
At the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, the local health department
last week issued a two-week lockdown for students in an attempt to slow
the spread of COVID-19 on campus. Several other schools have done the
same thing. To the north in East Lansing, Michigan State University has
one in place now. Union College, a small school in upstate New York,
emerged this week from its two-week lockdown, following a spike in
cases in early January.
"I am nervous about getting it," said Sophie Brown, a sophomore
studying art history at Union College. "I haven't dropped my guard,
even though COVID and this way of life seems to be the new norm." She
said she knows the risks: "I feel like that's where you run into the
most trouble, because we're at a point in our lives where we want to go
out — we want to go and meet new people and kind of be in college. But
we also kind of have to take a step back and look at the bigger
picture."
Looking ahead
For many campuses, the spring will look and feel similar to fall, with
mask mandates, limits on larger gatherings, to-go food options and
socially distanced spaces. The frequency and prevalence of testing for
the coronavirus is much improved, however, after research and case
studies have demonstrated the importance of regularly testing the
entire student body — including those who live off campus. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, which ahead of the fall semester
had not recommended that colleges test students on arrival, has since
updated its guidance to more clearly explain the benefits.
Another lesson learned from last spring, when the virus was first
spreading: It's not a good idea to have a spring break. Many schools
have announced there will be no spring break this year, based on
research that shows leaving campus to be with friends and family and
then returning a week later seeded multiple outbreaks in 2020.
Student views
While there is demand for more in-person opportunities — and major
challenges to virtual learning, including connectivity issues, Zoom
fatigue and extra costs for devices — the majority of students taking
online classes want those options to continue, according to survey
research from nonprofits Third Way and New America. Those surveys also
found that the pandemic has eroded students' trust in their college
leaders: Half of college students in the survey agreed with the
statement "my institution only cares about the money it can get from
me."
That figure is higher among Black and Latino students. But students
still appear to believe their colleges have their safety and well-being
in mind — 71% felt "my institution has my best interest at heart" and
also "my institution cares about my health and well-being."
At Spelman College in Atlanta, leaders invited first year students to
apply to live on campus for the spring semester. To have a low-density
campus, they anticipated turning some students down. But only a
fraction of the class applied. The number was low enough that the
college expanded on-campus housing to the entire student body. Every
student who wanted to be on campus got a spot.
Ayiana Davis Polen, one of the nearly 250 students on campus, says
she's grateful. She says she's not nervous about getting the virus,
saying she has friends who returned to other campuses in the fall and
didn't get it.
"There's things that I can do to prevent getting sick, so I'm just
going to make sure I take the proper steps," she says. She has a
thermometer and has been taking her temperature twice a day — when she
wakes up and before she goes to bed. She'll wear a mask when she leaves
her dorm, and she'll avoid crowds.
The interesting twist for Davis Polen is that even though she's now
living on campus, all classes but one — piano — are online. "It's true
I'll still be doing my classes from a desk in my bedroom, but at least
this semester I'm in a dorm. I'm still excited." She hopes there will
be opportunities for social interactions, like study groups, so she
won't feel like she's doing school all by herself.
Read this and other stories at NPR Ed
|
|
|
|