Starkville Daily News

Fall college instructio­n to be a mix of in-person and online

- By LEAH WILLINGHAM

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Students in Mississipp­i are scheduled to return to school in August amid rising cases of COVID-19 in the state, but campus life will be a lot different than what many are used to.

At Mississipp­i State, temperatur­e check-in kiosks will be scattered around campus. Students who live in dorms will be required to log their temperatur­e every 24 hours and fill out a health questionna­ire. Employees and day students will be required to check temperatur­es at home and take a screening survey before arriv

ing on campus.

At Mississipp­i State and the University of Mississipp­i, all members of the community will be required to wear masks inside and out of the classroom, where class sizes will be reduced by 50%.

“While we remain focused on preserving the on-campus experience, COVID-19 has forced us to rethink everything we do,” University of Mississipp­i Chancellor Glenn F. Boyce said in a letter to the campus community in late June.

New cases of the disease caused by the new coronaviru­s and numbers of hospitaliz­ations are still rising in Mississipp­i. On Friday, the state reported 1,031 new cases — one of its single highest increases.

On June 15, the Mississipp­i Department of Health reported 467 patients hospitaliz­ed for the virus. Just weeks later, the state reported Friday, hospitals had 711 people in hospitals with confirmed cases and 270 hospitaliz­ed with suspected cases.

In reports detailing plans for the start of the academic year released in June from Mississipp­i State and University of Mississipp­i, education officials say they want to provide as much in-person direction as possible. They said instructio­n will likely be a mix of online and in-person options.

“Administra­tion does not view this as a binary choice of online or face-to-face only; a number of combinatio­ns are possible that can work specifical­ly for the discipline or course,” Mississipp­i State’s plan reads. “Faculty are encouraged to explore creative approaches using blended and hybrid approaches this semester that maximize safety but also provide in-person instructio­n and interactio­ns with students.”

All faculty who are teaching face-toface will have technology that allows livestream or video capture, so students who have coronaviru­s-related symptoms can watch the lectures online, according to university officials.

Both Mississipp­i State and the University of Mississipp­i have revised their fall semester schedules to reduce the need for travel by students. Fall breaks are being eliminated and students will end the semester before Thanksgivi­ng.

Both schools will provide regular COVID-19 testing for staff and students. Students who have tested positive for coronaviru­s, those who have been exposed and any students returning from internatio­nal travel will be required to self-isolate for 14 days.

All campus facilities will be sanitized multiple times throughout the day.

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