Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It is very interesting that some schools are having difficulty with cases while others have had so few. It would be an interesting study of the whys.
I’d guess that the more selective the school the more serious (and intelligent) the students which should translate into superior outcomes. Big state U.....not so much.
DP.
Bit of snobbery and some assumptions showing there, PP. All the selectivity in the world won't help if you have a lot of students who live off-campus and do not practice very rigorous and consistent masking and distancing and generally work hard to keep themselves infection-free.
Even the most intelligent students are still 18-22 or so, and many are going to be book-smart and not necessarily smart about life. Or like a lot of young adults that age, they feel (even if their logical selves say otherwise) that they're invincibly healthy. And even these smart young adults might not be great at assessing their personal risk very well. Even if they can assess risk beautifully on a spreadsheet in some stats class or whatever.
Before you leap back in to crow, "Your kid must be at Big State U! Sour grapes!" -- because I know how the DCUM hive mind works like that -- my kid is at a small private college that currently has excellent control over the virus after most kids have been back on campus for three weeks and some for longer. And I
still don't care to make any assumptions about what is happening or what will happen there, despite the fact these are serious, intelligent students who are doing well so far.