Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lehigh has only freshmen and a few exceptions on campus right now, but a month in with about 2500 students on campus, they have had zero cases on campus.
Yeah, but they have a lot of unhappy students living in single rooms - no roommate, no social life.
Anonymous wrote:DC #1 is off campus in College Park. Having a blast living in an apartment with friends for the first time. Wishes more classes were in person but happy with in person lab. Finding outdoor activities to do in small groups (this is what DC likes anyways).
DC #2 is a freshman. Went in understanding exactly what things would look like. Also having a blast getting to know new kids. While it is harder, the kids seem kinder to one another and just so very happy to be out of their parents house. I believe they all feel part of something historic as well. DC #2 is most worried about getting out in isolation or quarantine.
I would not send a kid to in person college with a health problem or a mental health issue. This is anxiety inducing.
Anonymous wrote:Lehigh has only freshmen and a few exceptions on campus right now, but a month in with about 2500 students on campus, they have had zero cases on campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U of Alabama and U South Carolina
They are on the if you can’t see it, it must not exist philosophy.
LOL.
Easy to laugh but some of the southern schools appear to have spiked and are dropping. Too soon to tell but it’s worth watching to see if they are our version of Sweden
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the colleges in Amherst MA area
Not Smith. Such a disappointment.
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s a freshman at one of these SLACs. He’s really loves it. He’s super introverted. His school has all singles this year, which he loves. And all but one class is at least partially in person. A couple,e plus labs fully in person. He’s made a couple of friends from his orientation group. The eat outside in big circles of up to 10, and playing music outdoors and playing socially distant games in the stadium. He’s also enjoying checking out the town. Direct Qote: I love it here and am praying we don’t end up having to leave early.
Several things going on. We really talked to him about managing expectations and whether he should do a gap year. So, he went in with the mindset that anything with more freedom than living in his old bedroom and learning in the back is a win. Second, he’s quiet and an introvert. Even if frat parties were safe, he’d be avoiding them. In fact, he sought out colleges that didn’t have frats.
And third, his college has done a great job with their COVOD planning. He knew kids before he arrived, was hooked up with older students, etc.
0 cases on surveillance testing this week.
Anonymous wrote:All the colleges in Amherst MA area
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tufts has undergraduates on campus, testing twice a week (both on-campus and off-campus students), lots of restrictions (masks everywhere except dorm room, no dining hall right now, gym needs reservations, etc), combination of online and in-person classes. Has isolation dorms for anyone testing positive.
So far they are doing well. Keeping my fingers crossed that this keeps up so my DC can stay for the whole semester.
Isn’t tufts using a sort of pod system where students are in assigned groups?