USA TODAY US Edition

Students at high risk are feeling left behind

Many colleges won’t offer all classes online in fall

- Grace Hauck BRYAN TERRY/USA TODAY NETWORK SAMANTHA PRICE

College sophomore Cameron Lynch has lived the past five months in a single square mile, only venturing outside her home a couple of times a week for earlymorni­ng or late-night walks.

“It’s already a stressful time to be immunocomp­romised,” said Lynch, who has Type 1 diabetes, celiac disease and a form of muscular dystrophy. “Now, a good portion of able-bodied people are going back to the way life was, leaving us behind.”

Several weeks ago, Lynch, who attends the College of William & Mary in Williamsbu­rg, Virginia, authored a letter expressing her frustratio­ns and posted it to social media. She never expected the response she would get: Dozens of immunocomp­romised college students from across the U.S. started reaching out to her, so they formed a support group to share informatio­n on the policies their schools were implementi­ng.

Lynch is just one of the thousands of college students with weakened immune systems who are stuck inside amid the the coronaviru­s pandemic and navigating treacherou­s back-to-school dynamics. While many colleges and universiti­es offered all classes online last spring, many aren’t doing the same this fall, leaving immunocomp­romised students stressed out, rearrangin­g schedules and locked in lengthy exchanges with accommodat­ion offices.

People with weakened immune systems are at higher risk of getting severely sick from COVID-19 and may be sick for a longer period of time, according to

“... I shouldn’t have to sacrifice my classes of choice when an able-bodied student gets to go into class.” Samantha Price, a rising junior at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericks­burg, Virginia who has Type 1 diabetes

the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those with conditions such as diabetes, sickle cell disease, chronic kidney disease and asthma are at greater risk, the CDC says.

“These are very real concerns for our immunocomp­romised students,” said Dr. Khalilah Gates, a pulmonary and critical care specialist at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital. “Every immunocomp­romised state is not the same, so it is – as everything in COVID-19 has been – a risk-benefit discussion.”

Khalilah said returning to campus – particular­ly living in dorms – poses significan­t risks to immunocomp­romised students. People in that age group are also more likely to participat­e in extracurri­cular activities that may increase the risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on and exposure, she said.

“What COVID-19 has taught us is the need to be flexible and the need to adapt,” Khalilah said. “If that means the ability to participat­e in online learning, then that needs to be something we consider for those that would benefit.”

Samantha Price, who has Type 1 diabetes, was one of the students who saw Lynch’s posts on social media. The two had met 10 years ago when they were both living in Richmond, Virginia. They had been participat­ing in a theater program when Lynch saw Price whip out her insulin pump. Now, Price is helping Lynch coordinate the online support group for immunocomp­romised college students.

“We realized that we weren’t alone in the struggles,” said Price, a rising junior at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericks­burg, Virginia, who is pursuing communicat­ions and digital studies. “Both of us had been going back and forth with our universiti­es, trying to get answers about how they would be supporting us.”

The group soon realized that while many universiti­es were going fully or primarily online – about a quarter of four-year schools in the U.S. – or implementi­ng a hybrid course model, not all were offering online students the same options as in-person learners.

“Some of my classes aren’t offered online. The school is expecting me to drop those classes and sign up for alternativ­e classes,” Price said last week. “That’s a problem because I shouldn’t have to sacrifice my classes of choice when an able-bodied student gets to go into class.”

Price and Lynch argue that such policies violate the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act – a 1990 law that guarantees equal protection for people with a wide range of disabiliti­es – because students with disabiliti­es do not have access to the same resources as everyone else. That’s why the two penned a letter to 12 public colleges and universiti­es in Virginia to demand the institutio­ns ensure equitable learning.

“Without remote learning options for all their classes, hundreds of immunocomp­romised students are being forced to either risk their health and attend inperson classes or make last-minute changes to their carefully designed schedules to switch to a limited variety of online courses,” the students wrote.

Students who have difficulty attending traditiona­l college classes have long been calling for greater access to online courses. The pandemic has only “heightened” the issue, said Robin Jones, director of the Great Lakes ADA Center in Chicago.

While the ADA requires institutio­ns to explore what options are available to students expressing concerns, it does not require an institutio­n to provide a program or service that they are not already providing, Jones said.

At the same time, the pandemic has demonstrat­ed that schools were able to offer online classes in the spring, even if they hadn’t in the past, Jones said.

“So the argument that a college or university cannot offer a course remotely is somewhat negated because they already demonstrat­ed that they are able to do so for everyone,” Jones said.

In March, the U.S. Department of Education released a brief “fact sheet” providing guidance to schools on how to address the risk of COVID-19 while protecting the civil rights of students. The guidance reminded schools that they must continue to comply with their non-discrimina­tion obligation­s under federal civil rights laws, including the ADA.

Offering online options as “individual­ly-oriented accommodat­ions” runs the risk of excluding people with disabiliti­es from university activities, the Accessible Campus Action Alliance, a group of faculty with disabiliti­es and their allies, said in a June statement. The group called for “safe, equitable, and inclusive online-centric teaching” during the pandemic.

While the University of Mary Washington – where Price attends – initially planned for about half of all courses to be in-person or a mix of in-person and online, the university adjusted its plans last week, according to university spokespers­on Lisa Chinn Marvashti. All courses will be online for the first three weeks, and courses “could be converted” to online settings as in-person classes resume, Marvashti said.

A spokespers­on for the College of William and Mary – where Lynch attends – said that while not all courses will be offered remotely, students can adjust their schedules to include only courses that are being offered online.

“We certainly understand that there are members of our community who want or need to take all remote classes during this period. There are options that allow them to do this,” spokespers­on Suzanne Clavet said.

“For others, there is desire to have classes taught in other modes. Our fall 2020 schedule is designed to meet as many of these needs as possible and provide as much flexibilit­y as possible while still prioritizi­ng the health and safety of our faculty, staff, students and greater community.”

Tiffany Alsbury, a master’s student at Louisiana State University living with lupus, has been taking classes online since July from her Gulfport, Mississipp­i, home. In March, Alsbury underwent a treatment that severely compromise­d her immune system, so she’s been taking precaution­s to avoid contractin­g COVID-19.

Her classes are offered in-person, but she opted to take them online because it’s “safer.” Sitting at home has been “a battle,” she said.

“It’s just not the same as it being in person. It’s been a lot of extra hours of trying to communicat­e with professors. Sometimes, I’m not getting the same amount of education out of it,” Alsbury said. “I do think they’re trying their hardest to be accepting of all of us, but it is uncharted territory.”

Some schools are being proactive about accommodat­ing their immunocomp­romised students. The University of Virginia is offering some in-person instructio­n but is making all courses available online, for example. Cameron Lynch’s sister, Kylie, who has severe asthma and a stomach condition and has been quarantini­ng in her New York City apartment, said that her college, the New School, opted to go online-only, in part out of considerat­ion for its immunocomp­romised students.

At the end of June, the New School notified its students in an email that all fall semester courses would be online, to “ensure that all students have continued access to classes” and to “address the specific safety concerns of students, faculty, and staff in high risk groups, including those who are immunocomp­romised,” according to the email obtained by USA TODAY.

Kylie Lynch said the school’s explicit recognitio­n of students like her made her “feel understood.”

“People underestim­ate that the decision of whether or not to go back to school is literally life or death for some people,” she said. “Luckily, I didn’t have to make that choice. My school made it for me.”

Price and Lynch said they have heard back from five of the Virginia schools they contacted about offering more online courses but that “none of them have been willing to talk further about it.”

“They just restated everything we already knew,” Price said.

Several of the universiti­es thanked Lynch and Price for sharing their concerns and said they would “work to accommodat­e students who wish to be fully online.” One university added that some courses “truly cannot” be offered online.

Price said she’s had to “fight and persist” to get her university to let her take her courses online this fall so that she doesn’t fall off track to graduate. Lynch said she had to drop half of her classes and rework her schedule, and she plans to take on a virtual internship in her free time.

“It’s been a hard summer, and I expect that the school year is going to be even harder,” Price said. “People think young people are out partying and doing whatever we want, but there’s a group of us who are having to sit inside and watch the rest of the world move on.”

 ??  ?? Immunocomp­romised graduates heading to college face more than the usual challenges.
Immunocomp­romised graduates heading to college face more than the usual challenges.
 ??  ?? Shown on a Zoom call, Samantha Price, right, helps Cameron Lynch, left, coordinate a support group for immunocomp­romised students.
Shown on a Zoom call, Samantha Price, right, helps Cameron Lynch, left, coordinate a support group for immunocomp­romised students.
 ?? JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP ?? New and returning college students with weakened immune systems navigate a treacherou­s environmen­t.
JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP New and returning college students with weakened immune systems navigate a treacherou­s environmen­t.

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