Lodi News-Sentinel

COVID-19 leads some colleges to tentativel­y cancel spring break

- By Laurie Baratti

A growing number of colleges and universiti­es are canceling spring break six months in advance, due to concerns about students’ anticipate­d travel activities amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The University of Michigan is the latest institutio­ns to amend its 2021 academic calendar, removing the traditiona­l spring break period, which it did at a Board of Regents meeting Sept. 17, according to ABC News.

In doing so, the University of Michigan joins other Big Ten universiti­es that have eliminated spring break for the coming semester, including Ohio State University; Purdue University; University of Iowa and University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Other schools that have followed suit include Baylor University, Carnegie Mellon University; Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa; Kansas State University; Texas Christian University; University of Florida, University of Kentucky and the University of Tennessee.

University of Michigan, Dearborn Chancellor Domenico Grasso wrote in a letter requesting changes to the academic calendar that the move would, “mitigate the possible risks associated with campus community members who may have traveled during the middle of the semester.”

Baylor Provost Nancy Brickhouse said in a message to students that calling off spring break was in the interest of, “preventing COVID-19 outbreaks like we saw across the country last spring.”

The rationale behind skipping next year’s spring school holidays is sound, according to a June 2020 study conducted by Ball State and Vanderbilt, which examined the GPS smartphone data of over seven million U.S. college students during spring break. Its findings provide empirical, causal evidence of the nationwide effects of spring breakers in relation to COVID-19’s spread.

“We find that the increase in case growth rates peaked two weeks after students returned to campus,” said Paul Niekamp, an economics professor at the Miller College of Business. “Consistent with secondary spread to more vulnerable population­s, we find an increase in mortality growth rates that peaked four to five weeks after students returned.”

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