| I'm less concerned with state schools that have 80+ % in-state students -- but more concerned with top US News schools that draw kids from all over the country and world. That seems so dangerous -- especially students living in dorms. |
| All of my daughters friends are headed back to school even if school is on-line. They are juniors and seniors with apartments off campus. So why not open schools? |
Your logic is flawed. It only takes one infected student to take out the whole campus. Even a state school like Virginia Tech is 11% international students, has 10k students in dorms and usually has about 1/3 of their freshman student body from out of state. And do you know which state is the number 1 exporter of college students? New Jersey! |
My dd’s floor freshman year had two toilets for 22 girls. |
Both of my DCs' schools have already announced that they will be opening. We will be happy to send them. One has announced that classes will be available both in-person and on-line. Shortened semester so that kids come home for Thanksgiving with no need to travel back to school. Happy that they are using science that reflects little to no risk for college students. |
Please see statistics from all over the world about risk to this age group... |
I hate to break it to you, but many students and professors are vulnerable. How do we handle that? |
| I will let my DS go. I hope he is infected while he is there and by the time he returns home, he will be immune. Then we don't have to worry about him bring the virus to us. But that's really not fair to the numerous "elderly" professors and staff on campus. But it is their decision, and I support it, as long as he quarantines if he gets sick. |
It's not the decision of the faculty and staff. The administration is making the decision for them, like Trump did for the workers in the meat plants. My college has not consulted us, but has already decided to make us come back in the fall and essentially double our workload. Your kid will infect me (unless I am allowed to take a year off unpaid). |
I'm a professor and I agree with this. Most traditional lecture courses do not involve a whole lot of student-professor and student-student interaction. There is no reason those courses can't be done using online lectures (live or recorded) mixed with some live sessions that encourage interaction. I read that article going around about knowing the risks and avoiding them. It made me feel nervous about spending multiple hours per week in windowless rooms of 30-40 students who are not likely to be doing much, if any, social distancing. Those classes are scheduled in classrooms that barely hold more than the class size. Moving them to a larger room won't work because classroom space is hard to come by as it is. There aren't enough 75- or 100-person rooms to move all the 30-40-person classes into them. I think the decision is going to be made for us by local health officials. They will want physical distancing in classrooms, and will probably advise us to move courses in which this is not possible to online. If this happens it would free up a lot of classroom space for the classes that really need to be done in person. I am also concerned about what school will look like for my young kids next year. If they aren't in school on the days I am scheduled to teach, I can't come to campus those days. |
This might be hard for you to understand but for most of us, doing what we can to ensure that trump is not re-elected and doing what we can to ensure that as many people as possible stay alive and healthy really are two separate issues — even if we want both of those things. Have you actually ever had a conversation with a “liberal”? |
it's hard for some of us to justify college cost with online classes. I hope we going to come out of this with options for online classes at a fraction of the cost. |
I hope he can just infect others, not us. |
So the professors, TA's and admin staff, who are all doing the same work, should get a fraction of the salary? The buildings still need to be maintained. Should the janitors get a fraction of the cost too? |
If you want bargain online classes, there are plenty of options for that. If you want a low student:instructor ratio with teaching done by leaders in their fields, you'll have to pay more. |