My son is more introverted, but I agree about better he doesn’t infect me. Hospital down the street from his apartment. |
I objected to : "the type of kid who will get COVID" since is suggests a stereotype that will be imposed on people the the poster has NO knowledge of. It smacks of an assumption that there is the good type and bad type, and the latter get the disease. That is highly oversimplified. Environment is more important than individual choices, when you are living/eating and learning with large numbers of people indoors. Masks are great, but they reduce risk by around 82% (not 100). So, referring to the "type of people" who will get sick is actually not helpful. I can also lead to a false of security (which has been shown with other health risks. People think safety advice is for those "other" at risk people). |
+1 Buy tuition insurance. |
| I think my DD will be fine because she's a germaphobe and will be careful. She has a small, secluded campus that normally would have been quite insular. What I worry about are all the kids now commuting to campus bringing all the effects of their outside interactions with them. |
|
I love how zero parents here care is their kids get all their professors sick. “My kid’s not infecting me! All good!”
|
Further proof that parents view college as a commoditized product rather than an education. Professors are merely front line employees. Especially when parents demand to “speak with the manager” (aka dean) |
| Before you buy insurance, make sure that it explicitly includes Covid related claims. |
Please research the newest information from valid sources we have and see how long those "antibodies" last and then try again. "LOL!" |
What is "your fault" is knowing *choosing* to go into "close quarters with hundreds of thousands of young people" during a pandemic, when you had options not to do so, and when your school even gave you the option not to skip the year and wait it out, but to keep studying and working towards your degree. So there's that. |
| Possibly. God’s will. And it is a sacrifice we are willing to make to reopen the economy to help the president get re-elected. |
|
At 1 crowded college bar in Michigan in June it is thought that 1 person had covid. The bar had spaced tables and many persons though far from all were wearing masks. 102 persons at the bar that night caught covid. One person who caught it that night then further spread it to another 60 or so while attending an outdoor gathering the next night.
The thing is -- this disease spreads very, very easily. This is not HIV. This is like the the common cold in terms of how easy it spreads. Now -- not as many overall are dying from it though still large numbers -- 980 yesterday alone. And, not as many younger people are dying from it. We are better at treating advanced serious cases now than we were in March and April. Still -- every case is potentially serious. I know 18 year olds with permanent lung lesions that will prevent them from participating in sports ever again. Lung lesions are pretty common for serious cases. They will always have to carry inhalers and avoid polluted areas/smog for the rest of their lives. |
LOL. Can you please stop? You’re just as stupid and wrong as anti-maskers. Yes, antibodies naturally decrease, but T Cells take over and provide you immunity. If you don’t understand what you read, please don’t try to repeat it. |
Different poster. Not sad at all! My son is the same. We are saving $6000 this semester so he doesn't need to take out a $5500 loan. If he also lives at home spring semester he won't need to take a loan sophomore year either. I'm not sad about that at all. Money is a concern for us. I'd rather he get the campus experience but this year is not going to be normal at all. |
| Be honest...what do you think? When will these ridiculous questions end? I don’t have crystal ball. |
|
After being home for 6 months my DD is going back to college. I am really scared for her but we are working to minimize the risk as much as possible. As a sophomore, she is living off campus in a 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment. It is one the 2nd floor so she can avoid the elevators.
My DD did complete spring and summer semesters while she was home so there is that. She (I really hope/believe) will do the best she can to be safe. She has Cough Variant Asthma and maybe Bronchomalacia (sp?) so would likely not fare well if she got the virus. I have to let her go and hope for the best. It is not easy. At all but I believe in my heart it is the right thing to do. |