The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

U.S. colleges mull new virus protocols for students’ return

- By Lisa Rathke

COLCHESTER, VT. » St. Michael’s College managed to keep coronaviru­s cases at bay for almost two months this fall with students tested upon arrival and once every three weeks.

But in mid-October, cases at the small Vermont school started to climb. The outbreak was linked to an ice rink more than 40 miles away. The liberal arts college shifted to all-remote learning and closed the campus to visitors. By November, a total of 76 of the roughly 1,400 students on campus had tested positive, the school said.

“It was very concerning to experience the spike in cases that we did after so many weeks of surveillan­ce tests with no positives,” President Lorraine Sterritt said by email.

When students come back for the spring semester, St. Michael’s will begin testing them weekly. The college may also require students to move to a separate residence hall when they are told to quarantine.

The coronaviru­s presented huge challenges for the fall semester for U.S. colleges that opened the academic year with inperson learning, including some that took a battering from outbreaks. Those not joining the growing number that will offer only virtual learning are assessing how they would bring students back after the winter holidays while the country faces crushing rates of virus infections.

Schools that are bringing students back are adjusting testing protocols, introducin­g new screenings, and eliminatin­g spring breaks to discourage students from traveling to help keep campuses open.

Other schools big and small think it’s still possible to keep a pandemic-era residentia­l college experience.

California Polytechni­c State University in San Luis Obispo plans to add saliva testing in the winter quarter that will be processed on campus and will allow it “to test many more people much more quickly — our current estimate is 4,000 tests per day by mid-January,” President Jeffrey Armstrong said in a campuswide message this month.

In the spring semester, Colby College in Maine wants to add some rapid antigen tests to twiceweekl­y tests for students, faculty and staff. It also did away with the oneweek spring break replacing it with two mini-breaks in March and April.

“We’ll program stuff for the campus so people get a break,” Chief Financial Officer Douglas Terp said.

More schools are expected to require students get tested before they come to campus rather than when they arrive, as some institutio­ns did before the fall semester, said Barbara Mistick, president of the National Associatio­n of Independen­t Colleges and Universiti­es.

Institutio­ns like Syracuse University in New York abandoned in-person learning earlier than planned this fall but are planning on a resumption of campus life next semester.

But a growing number of schools will stick with virtual instructio­n through the spring.

“We are seeing a rapid rise in colleges and universiti­es announcing they will move to remote learning for the remainder of this semester and for the spring,” said Lynn Pasquerell­a, president of the Associatio­n of American Colleges and Universiti­es.

George Washington University in Washington, D.C., for one, announced early last month it will continue most of its classes virtually.

Student cooperatio­n with protocols helped to keep the number of coronaviru­s cases low at the University

of Vermont’s campus in the small city of Burlington, President Suresh Garimella said.

On a recent day, students wearing masks streamed through a tent outside the student center where they are required to be tested weekly. They stayed apart, stopped at a station to sanitize their hands and blow their nose and then proceeded into the indoor testing center.

“It’s part of my routine,” said sophomore Brian Boyle of the testing.

The school received federal coronaviru­s relief funding for virus-related expenses like testing, but Garimella estimates it will spend an additional $10 million to $15 million.

There are also a lot of precaution­s in place, rules for social distancing and the maximum number of people in a group, Boyle said. It’s harder to get together with people socially, but he said students can find ways to go about it and still follow the rules and be safe.

 ?? RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? University of Utah student Abigail Shull takes a rapid COVID-19test in Salt Lake City on Nov. 18.
RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE University of Utah student Abigail Shull takes a rapid COVID-19test in Salt Lake City on Nov. 18.

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