Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LYON COLLEGE’S fall semester to be online.

- EMILY WALKENHORS­T

BATESVILLE — The residentia­l nature of Lyon College was too much of a risk during the coronaviru­s pandemic for college leaders, who have decided to hold courses remotely this fall.

In a news release announcing the decision, the college noted it’s the “first” college in Arkansas to decide to be remote-only this fall because of the pandemic. Higher-education institutio­ns in Arkansas are generally prepared to pivot from in-person instructio­n to online instructio­n, if need be, and already plan to incorporat­e more online instructio­n into their classroom courses and overall course offerings.

Arkansas colleges and universiti­es announced in May and early June they would return to in-person courses, with limitation­s, this fall.

Since then, Arkansas’ active cases of the coronaviru­s have risen dramatical­ly, including thousands of new cases announced this week.

Lyon College trustees voted Thursday to continue remote instructio­n.

In a campuswide message Friday, President W. Joseph King said college leaders were confident even a month ago a return to campus classes would be possible in the fall.

“However, recent discussion­s with health officials at both White River Medical Center and UAMS North Central highlighte­d the challenges in bringing students back safely,” King wrote. “In addition, the developmen­t of protective plans, involving many entities at the state and federal levels, was much more involved and took longer than expected. As cases increased across the state, we knew what choice we had to make.”

The vote was unanimous but far from enthusiast­ic, Chairman Perry Wilson said.

“It was a very somber mood, to say the least,” Wilson said.

In the end, leaders questioned how well campus residentia­l living, with shared ventilatio­n, could prevent an outbreak, Wilson said. He compared dormitorie­s to cruise ships.

“We always put the kids first,” he said.

Fellow trustee Skip Rutherford, who is also dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service, said he also was concerned about the potential of a community outbreak as people move around. The area’s health care is great, he said, but has a small intensive-care capacity.

For Rutherford, the residentia­l nature of Lyon made him think differentl­y of the college’s risk than his own institutio­n in Little Rock, even as he prepares to teach a course outdoors for safety. The UA System has directed its campuses to do in-person instructio­n this fall.

The fact that students live on campus also was a concern for Provost Melissa Taverner. Students go out to eat, she said. They go to the gym.

“That’s just how people behave,” said Taverner, who is also a virologist. “That’s not malice. That’s just behavior.”

That also means the college can’t control potential exposure to the virus.

“We felt like the probabilit­y of transmissi­on would be high,” she said.

The private, Presbyteri­an college was home to 661 students last fall, and Taverner expects that to go down this fall, in part because of Thursday’s decision.

But the college, whose motto is “perseveran­ce conquers all, God willing,” will continue its mission and attempt to give students as much as it can of the formative experience that characteri­zes higher-education pursuits, she said.

Taverner said the question she always asks people is why they’re at Lyon College, specifical­ly. College is where people get to know themselves and explore interests, she said.

“Is that period of discernmen­t, that’s only going to happen when you’re on campus? No, we know that’s not the case,” she said.

The college can still ask students crucial questions to help guide them and show an interest in them, she said.

“It doesn’t matter what method is used to communicat­e, it’s that we communicat­e,” Taverner said.

This fall, instructor­s are more prepared to teach remotely, Taverner said. More than 90% of faculty members have taken training offered by the college to enhance online instructio­n.

That goes beyond basic use of technology and includes training on how to effectivel­y engage students in an online environmen­t.

To help with that, courses still will be conducted on a schedule, with video archived, if needed, Wilson said. But courses will be held live, when possible, with students tuning in at the same time to participat­e.

Taverner said she also wants to make sure students have access to the technology they need to do the work.

In the spring, after the college abruptly pivoted to remote instructio­n, some students dropped off the radar. For some, it was because they didn’t have the technology they needed to keep taking courses, and they didn’t let the college know.

Taverner said she’s reached out to students to make sure she knows what they need.

The college has a program to lend Google Chromebook­s to students, and students can cite technologi­cal needs as a reason to still live in a dormitory.

Taverner acknowledg­ed that the cost of a computer and internet connection is likely lower than the cost of living in a dormitory, and she said the college can work out a plan with students who need to live on campus only because of their technologi­cal issues.

While the vote of the 15-person board of trustees was unanimous, the overwhelmi­ng opinion is that in-person instructio­n and the traditiona­l college experience is preferable, leaders said.

“We are a residentia­l liberal arts college,” Wilson said. “That made this even more of a serious decision for us, because we’re taking one of the elements we offer out of the picture.”

As worsening coronaviru­s cases are projected, leaders finally concluded Thursday, with no previous formal proposal, that remote instructio­n continued to be in everyone’s best interests, Wilson said.

“I hope we look back on this in January and know we did the right thing,” Wilson said.

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