Anonymous wrote:Umm, no. There's another virus going around at UVA as well as other colleges. The vast majority of students who are getting tested are testing negative, my son is one of them as well as his roommate. This alarmist mentality without any sort of supporting evidence other than someone is coughing is ridiculous. Even if Covid were spreading, what doe sit matter - I think something like 98% of UVA students and a like majority of faculty are vaccinated. You're not going to stop the spread, but can stop the seriousness of the symptoms, which is what the vaccine does very well.
Wanting to shut down everything is unrealistic and isn't going to happen. We have to learn to live with and manage this disease. If you're so worried about your kid catching Covid at school, you shouldn't have enrolled them in the first place. Better to lock them in your basement.
Anonymous wrote:Talked to DD, who is a first-year at UVA.
She says classes are disrupted by coughing kids, some classes and sororities are going virtual. But that kids are showing up to class with Covid symptoms because professors make it difficult to make up work.
No one is getting tested. She thinks the university doesn’t really want to know so it doesn’t have to make hard decisions about lockdowns, etc.
Professor friend of mine says three kids in his daughter’s elementary school class tested positive last week. He has 5-6 students who also tested positive.
Anyone get a sense that Charlottesville is just a hotspot?
They had that damn super spreader event Saturday. Football game and pep rally before.
OP, I live in Cville. No, it's not a hotspot, and I feel like UVA did a great job with vaccinations beforehand. In general Cville has been awesome at masking and being careful. Number may look high b/c of the hospital. and fwiw, my dc first year at another state school reports the same: There is a horrid virus going around with coughing and such (he got it) but his covid test was negative.
Just posting b/c no, I don't think UVA is a quiet "hotspot". The football game? Ugh. We'll see how that works out.
Delta making the rounds at the frat parties too.
Anonymous wrote:Wish these weird football games could be limited for crowd size, but it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is happening at all colleges and no one is getting tested because they don’t want to miss class and fail out.
+1 This is not unique to UVA. And it happened last year wherever in-person classes went on, too.
NP. Nope, you're misinformed, PP. This did not happen "last year wherever in-person classes went on." Some small colleges did very well. My DC is at a small college that had two full semesters on campus last year. More than 50 percent of DC's classes were in person and DC had friends in other majors who had even more in-person classes. Regular testing, masking and distancing protocols (which were relaxed as time went on and the students' cooperation paid off with low infection rates) all meant that the restricions could be a bit relaxed in the spring. Now DC is back at college, 99 percent of the student body is fully vaccinated, 97 percent of staff and faculty are fully vaccinated, classes are all in person except for a few taught by professors with health issues, and there will still be regular testing, just not as frequently as last year pre-vaccines.
Making grossly generalized statements like "it happened last year wherever in-person classes went on" is just a way to let UVA off the hook, as if it's OK for the university to say "we can't help it if there's an outbreak! No one can control it in a college setting!" Yes, small colleges can. DC didn't choose a small college with this in mind (no one could have) but frankly I would advise anyone concerned about issues like student health and safety to consider small colleges after this experience. I know--apples and oranges to compare UVA with a small college But it's just not correct to pretend that all in-person schools were tanked by the virus last year.
Anonymous wrote:Wish these weird football games could be limited for crowd size, but it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Yep, no stopping it now. We failed as a country.
Many more people will die. It will mutate some time soon. College football games major super spreaders, because the Delta doesn't care.
Thank you Trumpers this is all on you. We will never forget your selfishness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VT is the same, but I am literally laughing at their 56 reported cases on their dashboard. Everyone my daughter knows is sick and they are refusing to test.
Yeah, it sucks that they are not testing but do we not recall that kids always get sick when they go to college? Like clockwork?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is happening at all colleges and no one is getting tested because they don’t want to miss class and fail out.
+1 This is not unique to UVA. And it happened last year wherever in-person classes went on, too.
Anonymous wrote:VT is the same, but I am literally laughing at their 56 reported cases on their dashboard. Everyone my daughter knows is sick and they are refusing to test.