Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So why didn’t we have more cases of sick college employees , students and professors in March and April. Or did we? I mean this virus was all over the place in February and early March. Schools didn’t send kids home til the end of March. I’d love to see the data on people who had direct contact with either college students or employees who were infected as well. I know we can’t do actual contact tracing now. But even antidotally to find out how many people who are x degrees of separation From someone at a university for very sick or died.
All colleges closed by mid march, when cases in the entire US were still in the hundreds.
Please educate yourself PP. Anyone following the news is well aware that community spread was under way in February in many cities in the U.S. with thousands of infected individuals in New York city in alone in February. Of course there were many New York college students infected in February.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/23/us/coronavirus-early-outbreaks-cities.html?referringSource=articleShare
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like even though prisons and hospitals had huge outbreaks. Colleges and universities didn’t.
Because they all shut down early.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like even though prisons and hospitals had huge outbreaks. Colleges and universities didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]Well, the professors barely show up so it is certainly possible for the professors. Many professors average like 3 hours a week on campus pre covid.
Why do you post negative stuff like this?
Most full time professors (not instructors or adjuncts) work more than 60 hours a week. Just about all weekends.
This forum must not know a SINGLE academic. They keep throwing around images of a cushy lifestyle and they are absolutely clueless.
Anonymous wrote:[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]Well, the professors barely show up so it is certainly possible for the professors. Many professors average like 3 hours a week on campus pre covid.
Why do you post negative stuff like this?
[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]Well, the professors barely show up so it is certainly possible for the professors. Many professors average like 3 hours a week on campus pre covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So why didn’t we have more cases of sick college employees , students and professors in March and April. Or did we? I mean this virus was all over the place in February and early March. Schools didn’t send kids home til the end of March. I’d love to see the data on people who had direct contact with either college students or employees who were infected as well. I know we can’t do actual contact tracing now. But even antidotally to find out how many people who are x degrees of separation From someone at a university for very sick or died.
We didn't. Because our universities decided to shut down right after spring break around March 6th. I was surprised when UVA said students should not return at all but that proved to be a very smart decision. Harvard started the ball and the others followed. The point wasn't to even allow the students who had gone overseas or (ugh, Miami for beach week) to return because by then they were probably carriers. I don't know when you are getting your data about the end of March. By then our two college students had been home three weeks working in our basement.
Depends on the school and their spring break. No one even announced shutting down until March 9-10-11 in Boston area and were not actually off campus until closer to March 15; many later. High schools were open another week after that.
There were a ton of kids "sick" in Feb at my kid's Boston-area college, so many that a few of her classes that last week of Feb had been cancelled by the prof for too many being absent for one, and yes, for the prof being sick for another. (Prof is fine.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So why didn’t we have more cases of sick college employees , students and professors in March and April. Or did we? I mean this virus was all over the place in February and early March. Schools didn’t send kids home til the end of March. I’d love to see the data on people who had direct contact with either college students or employees who were infected as well. I know we can’t do actual contact tracing now. But even antidotally to find out how many people who are x degrees of separation From someone at a university for very sick or died.
We didn't. Because our universities decided to shut down right after spring break around March 6th. I was surprised when UVA said students should not return at all but that proved to be a very smart decision. Harvard started the ball and the others followed. The point wasn't to even allow the students who had gone overseas or (ugh, Miami for beach week) to return because by then they were probably carriers. I don't know when you are getting your data about the end of March. By then our two college students had been home three weeks working in our basement.
Anonymous wrote:Nope. But isn’t their age group least impacted?[/quote]
It may be, although I know two teens right now fighting for their lives at Fairfax Hospital and NIH. But putting risk to their group aside, we are talking about teens living together in close confines in dorms and infecting one another then spreading to the workers of the university, the dining hall staff, the professors, the older professors, the poorer staff. And then out into the community. Also think of asymptomatic students walking around in the adjacent community buying things and dining out - that then spreads to the local community that supports the university. To open too soon is to jeopardize all those people and their families.