Daily Press

Europe’s schools facing hard lessons

Safety precaution­s vary at universiti­es across continent

- By Sylvie Corbet and Taryn Siegel

PARIS — Can mandatory masks offer enough protection in lecture halls so packed that late arrivals have to sit on the floor?

That’s what worries many students at the centuries-old Sorbonne University in Paris as the coronaviru­s is on the rebound across France.

At least a dozen COVID-19 clusters have emerged since French campuses and classrooms opened this month. The clutches of cases are a warning sign for countries elsewhere in Europe, where most universiti­es are readying to resume teaching and research in coming weeks.

“We go back to university in conditions that are a bit extreme, and we fear we might get COVID-19,” Sorbonne student Elise Gilbert, 20, said of the overcrowdi­ng.

France’s experience stands in contrast to what’s happening in Britain, where virus-driven changes on campuses mean university life will look a lot different this term. Germany and Italy are also adapting their delivery of higher education in response to the pandemic.

The French government was determined to get people back to classrooms to bridge education inequities that the pandemic has exacerbate­d. The government also urged workers to return to offices and job sites to resuscitat­e the economy and to “learn to live with the virus.”

At universiti­es, the main change this year is mandatory mask-wearing at all times. But keeping physical distances appears impossible in many places.

Some students are raising

their grievances on Twitter, using the hashtag #Balancetaf­ac (“Squeal on your uni”) to share pictures of packed classrooms and corridors.

They describe situations where there’s no soap to wash their hands and where rooms, sometimes with no windows to provide fresh air, are not being disinfecte­d between lectures.

Neverthele­ss, the Sorbonne is maintainin­g inperson classes for the time being.

“It’s quite hard at the moment because we haven’t got any extra means,” Franziska Heimburger, assistant director of the university’s English department, said. “We don’t have any more teachers, we don’t have any more space, so we basically have to teach as best we can.”

Heimburger said instruc

tors won’t penalize students for pandemic-related absences. “I’ve had students who live with their grandparen­ts and they are worried of taking (the virus) back home with them,” she said.

Many students also expressed anger when French authoritie­s appeared to blame the country’s recent virus outbreaks mostly on students attending parties.

One factor in the overcrowdi­ng is more students are attending French universiti­es. The number of students enrolled jumped by 270,000 to 2.8 million after the exam which allows high school students access to universiti­es was canceled due to the pandemic. Students were instead granted access based on school grades, and many more qualified than usual.

The safety precaution­s

differ broadly among schools. Some have strict public health measures in place, with small class size limits and a mix of inperson and online classes.

In the U.K., most universiti­es do not begin their fall terms until late September or early October, and are readying big changes.

At the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, where the fall semester began Monday, many classes are being taught online — other than laboratory sessions or other practical instructio­n where hands-on learning is essential. Student societies are barred from meeting in person, and many students arriving from overseas will have to quarantine for two weeks in line with government protocols.

At University College London, only a quarter of

the buildings will be occupied at one time. Teaching spaces will incorporat­e social distancing and everyone must wear face-masks. The university created an app for students to alert authoritie­s if they have symptoms and plans to test up to 1,000 students and staff a day to keep the campus safe.

“I’ve got a public health expert team that are advising me when it’s appropriat­e to extend testing beyond those that are immediatel­y symptomati­c,” Michael Arthur, the president and provost at UCL. “So I think we’re reasonably confident if we do have an outbreak — and I’m sure we will have, we’re just playing with statistics — that we can move in and contain it very rapidly.”

Student housing has been adapted to allow those who test positive to self-isolate.

In Germany, most universiti­es won’t start lectures before next month, and they have introduced numerous rules to ensure distancing, increased hygiene and bans on students’ parties. They are also expanding online teaching.

Student associatio­ns in the Dutch university city of Delft sent a letter last week calling on students to “take responsibi­lity” for reining in infections that are spreading quickly, particular­ly in student housing.

“The initiative is with students to prevent a local lockdown,” the associatio­ns said. “It’s not too late, but time is pressing.”

Many Italian universiti­es are reopening with distance learning this fall. Priority for physical classrooms was being given to first-year students, to aid their transition.

 ?? CECILIA FABIANO/LAPRESSE ?? Some universiti­es have strict public health measures in place, such as small class sizes. Above, students Sept. 3 in Rome.
CECILIA FABIANO/LAPRESSE Some universiti­es have strict public health measures in place, such as small class sizes. Above, students Sept. 3 in Rome.

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