Texarkana Gazette

Learning to lead amid uncertaint­y, adversity

At military academies, covid-19 is the enemy needing to be defeated

- LOLITA C. BALDOR

ANNAPOLIS, Md — As eight Navy midshipmen file into their economics class, instructor Kurtis Swope points to the antibacter­ial wipes on the desk. “Did you grab wipes?” he asks, then tells each one to take two, wipe down the desk when they arrive and again when they leave. “That should be your process.”

As chairman of Naval Academy’s economics department, Swope broke his class into two sections, so every student could attend in person. Down the hall another instructor, flanked by chemistry equipment, stands in front of two computers teaching in an empty classroom. And another instructor sits in her office, talking to a grid of camo-clad students on her laptop.

Under the siege of the coronaviru­s pandemic, classes have begun at the Naval Academy, the Air Force Academy and the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. But unlike at many colleges around the country, most students are on campus and many will attend classes in person.

This is largely due to advantages the military schools have. They’re small, each with about 4,500 students who know that joining the military means they’re subject to more control and expected to follow orders. Their military leaders, meanwhile, are treating the virus like an enemy that must be detected, deterred and defeated. They view the students as the next generation of commanders who must learn to lead troops through any crisis, including this one.

“If you look at covid as a threat, it helps you frame it in a way that I think you can then conduct action against it,” said Brig. Gen. Curtis Buzzard, West Point’s commandant. The cadets, he said, are getting lessons in “leading through uncertaint­y and adversity. I’ve had to do that throughout my career in the Army, particular­ly in combat, and they’re getting a little dose of it.”

The virus outbreak sent most academy students home to finish spring semester online. Air Force seniors stayed and graduated early.

Now students have returned, and 1% to 2% tested covid-19 positive on arrival and went into isolation. Since then, officials say they’ve seen few new cases. The Navy and Air Force will randomly test 15% of students weekly; West Point will test 15% to 20% monthly.

Because they need dozens of on-campus rooms to potentiall­y isolate covid students or quarantine those who come in contact with infected persons, the Navy and Air Force academies are renting space off-site for healthy students. The Navy, in Annapolis, Md., is putting 375 students at St. John’s College and the Air Force, in Colorado Springs, Colo., will put 400 in three local hotels.

“We know that with this population that about 90% of this age group is asymptomat­ic,” said Brig. Gen. Linell A. Letendre, Air Force Academy dean. “That’s what’s really scary about this disease. How do we find those individual­s who have it when they don’t even know they have it.”

To limit any spread, the academies made physical and academic changes. At the Navy’s Michelson Hall, blue tape marks seats that must remain empty, red tape forms large arrows on the floor showing students which way to go, and stairways are designated up or down. Signs remind students about social distancing. Library books borrowed online sit in paper bags for pick-up.

The Navy has the smallest campus, but two large tents were wedged next to the dorm for dining. The Air Force and Army, however, have been able to create large outdoor classrooms and meeting areas.

 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? A social distancing sign is seen on the floor as a midshipman walks to class at Luce Hall on Aug. 24 at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
(AP/Julio Cortez) A social distancing sign is seen on the floor as a midshipman walks to class at Luce Hall on Aug. 24 at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
 ?? (U.S. Air Force Academy/Trevor Cokley) ?? Air force Academy cadets started the school year Aug. 12 with a mix of reduced class sizes and remote learning at the academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.
(U.S. Air Force Academy/Trevor Cokley) Air force Academy cadets started the school year Aug. 12 with a mix of reduced class sizes and remote learning at the academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.
 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? A midshipman reaches for sanitizing wipes Aug. 24 while arriving to a leadership class taught by professor Celeste Luning (left) at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
(AP/Julio Cortez) A midshipman reaches for sanitizing wipes Aug. 24 while arriving to a leadership class taught by professor Celeste Luning (left) at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? Professor Kurtis J. Swope uses tongs to pull study packets out of a folder to display for students prior to an environmen­tal economics class at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
(AP/Julio Cortez) Professor Kurtis J. Swope uses tongs to pull study packets out of a folder to display for students prior to an environmen­tal economics class at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? Midshipmen walk in a line as they make their way to the five-meter platform to dive onto a pool at the end of a swim class.
(AP/Julio Cortez) Midshipmen walk in a line as they make their way to the five-meter platform to dive onto a pool at the end of a swim class.

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