Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Colleges consider opening campuses

Task forces ponder safety measures

- EMILY WALKENHORS­T

While colleges mull how to safely open their campuses to mostly regular activity this fall, many are bracing for slow summer openings and ordering personal protective equipment now to avoid possible supply shortages.

Task forces at Arkansas institutio­ns of higher learning have countless questions to consider in the coming months to meet their goals of opening campus to face-toface course delivery this fall.

Few institutio­ns have released official plans, as remote instructio­n remains the primary way to take classes during the summer.

The Arkansas Department of Health is preparing opening guidance for campuses but had nothing to share yet, a spokeswoma­n said Friday.

Compared to the challenges they face with opening in the fall, college administra­tors said they felt better about the slow opening this summer.

“I think we can do that beautifull­y,” University of Arkansas-Fort Smith Chancellor Terisa Riley said.

Riley intends to open the recreation­al center on a limited basis in June, perhaps eventually placing dividers between some equipment. She isn’t sure yet about reopening the library and its study rooms this summer, but she expects library employees will soon begin reporting to work to check in and shelve books returned this spring.

The University of Arkansas-Pulaski Technical College is looking at how many children it can accommodat­e

in its child care center but plans to open, Chancellor Margaret Ellibee said.

Arkansas State University announced Thursday its first phase to open, allowing additional staff — but still no students or faculty or staff who can work remotely — to resume working on campus Monday.

Riley and other college administra­tors in Arkansas remain concerned about what they can do to stymie the spread of the virus, including providing novel coronaviru­s testing on campus.

“The testing piece is really dependent on the resources we gain outside of the system,” Riley said.

At Lyon College, Provost Melissa Taverner hopes to be able to test students prior to showing symptoms, rather than what is typical now.

Many colleges have requested funding for coronaviru­s testing sites in the fall. That amount could total about $15 million, according to an estimate Gov. Asa Hutchinson delivered to the state’s CARES Act Steering Committee this week. The committee is helping determine how the state should spend the nearly $1.3 billion its received through the act.

That $15 million estimate comes from what colleges have submitted to the governor, said Alisha Lewis, spokeswoma­n for the Arkansas Division of Higher Education. A proposal has yet to be formally submitted to the committee, Hutchinson spokeswoma­n Katie Beck said.

Riley said the ideal scenario at UAFS is a person can be swabbed at the campus health clinic and their sample taken to a regional testing center for analysis. The lab test could take 15 minutes to yield a result. Factoring the time it takes to drive to the laboratory, the person could have their answer within an hour or so, waiting in an isolated area during that time.

The university doesn’t have the capability to test the samples on site, she said.

“We’re all kind of limited in our knowledge of how to deploy testing in higher education,” Riley said.

Batesville doesn’t have a testing site, Taverner said. Getting a testing site is a possibilit­y, she said, and if it happens Lyon officials will consider testing students before they arrive on campus.

Campus housing poses another challenge to institutio­ns trying to prevent infection outbreaks. Typically, students share rooms or suites with other students, and dormitory space is limited.

Dormitory design is better nowadays than when Riley was in college, she said. Suitestyle dorms help isolate people. But the traditiona­l dorm

— a long hall with a single community bathroom — is worse for spread, she said, recalling the time in college she contracted chicken pox from a floormate.

Most Lyon College students live on campus, Taverner said, which will help reduce the risk of people from outside campus bringing in the virus. But some students and employees still live outside of the county and they’ll need to be monitored more closely, she said.

She doesn’t want to keep students from leaving campus once they arrive in the fall, so the college will need to communicat­e the risk of leaving to students and their shared responsibi­lity to protect one another from the virus, she said.

Lyon College may look at grouping students together on campus and having them eat together regularly, Taverner said.

Ellibee said meals served on Pulaski Tech’s campus may need to be boxed up, togo meals because buffet-style dining isn’t allowed. That’s how food is delivered at some campus restaurant­s.

While colleges strive to offer face-to-face courses this fall, Taverner plans to train faculty on offering courses in more of a hybrid format. That way, if a student contracts the virus or comes into contact with someone who has it, they can self-quarantine but still access their courses.

Lyon College leaders believe face-to-face is the best method of instructio­n, but Taverner said faculty have learned the technology associated with remote instructio­ns is useful outside of a pandemic, such as if a professor wanted a flipped class format. In that setting, students watch lectures and then apply what they learned in in-person classroom exercises.

“Good teaching is good teaching. … The technology is secondary,” she said.

Colleges are planning to accommodat­e for social distancing in classrooms. Larger lecture classes may be broken up or moved online.

Everyone must wear masks in classrooms, administra­tors said. An influx in students on campus means an increased need for health supplies that have at times been in short supply during the pandemic.

“I think we’ve had challenges with that already this spring,” Ellibee said.

Some colleges have already begun purchasing masks for students, as well as cleaning supplies, gloves and hand sanitizer to keep spaces to clean.

Riley and Ellibee are hopeful that being a member of a large university will help as the system purchases the supplies in bulk for each campus.

Lyon College has started buying masks, hoping to get two for each student while encouragin­g students to have their own.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States