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Post by WorcesterGray on Mar 11, 2020 15:16:35 GMT -5
In-person classes end, as of 5PM, Friday, March 13.
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Post by WorcesterGray on Mar 11, 2020 15:19:25 GMT -5
Dear Members of the Campus Community and Holy Cross Parents,
As you know, the College’s Emergency Response Team has been closely monitoring the ongoing spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). We have been in constant communication with public health and infectious disease experts, colleagues across higher education and our faculty and staff about the possible and proper ways to mitigate the spread of the virus among our community here on campus, in Worcester and beyond. At this time we have no confirmed cases of COVID-19. Health Services is working with two individuals who are experiencing viral symptoms and we have well-developed protocols in place for this circumstance.
It is our responsibility to all members of our community, both on campus and in Worcester, to slow the spread of the virus. While the health and safety of our students, faculty and staff are our first priority, it is also incumbent on us to do our part to ensure that the healthcare system does not become overwhelmed so that they are able to tend to the most critical needs. Yesterday, in declaring a state of emergency in Massachusetts, Governor Baker said that our shared goal is to slow the spread and impact of this virus. Dr. Anthony Fauci ‘62, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, suggested at a congressional hearing today that Americans make changes to their typical practices in order to avoid exposure and prevent spread, saying “It doesn’t matter if you’re in a state that has no cases or one case — you have to start taking seriously what you can do now, if and when the infections will come. And they will come.” By instituting mitigating and social distancing protocols, we are hoping to do our part to slow the spread of the disease before we see large numbers of infected people in Massachusetts.
Therefore, based on public health leaders’ counsel, we have made the difficult and painful decision to move classes to a distance learning format and to make significant changes to our normal operations. Again, our overarching goal is to protect the health and safety of all our community members through minimizing exposure on campus. Fewer people on campus protects both those who remain on campus and those who can work and learn remotely. At the same time, we maintain our commitment to our students’ academic progress, including providing ways for our students to complete their coursework for this semester.
Here is what you need to know:
After 5:00 p.m. this Friday, March 13, we will not be holding in-person classes. All class meetings will transition to a distance learning format for the remainder of the semester. Faculty will use the week of March 16 to adjust their syllabi and determine how to best adjust their courses to a distance learning format.
We will shift to distance learning for all classes beginning Monday, March 23. We will continue classes in this format for the remainder of the semester. Between now and March 23, students should regularly check their Holy Cross email and the MOODLE site for their courses to look for messages from their faculty regarding assignments and modifications to their classes. The ITS help desk is prepared to assist faculty and students with technical questions and needs.
Students are required to move out no later than Saturday, March 14, at 5:00 p.m. taking all belongings with them. However, we encourage students to move out as soon as feasible. We understand that some students, particularly those from other countries, for whom this policy will be difficult. These individuals may petition for an exception using this form. Petitions must be received by tomorrow, Thursday, March 12, at 3:00 p.m.
Classes will continue this week for those who remain on campus. Students should reach out to their professors if they will miss class on Thursday or Friday.
We are committed to maintaining advising and support services for students. The Career Center, Chaplains Office, Class Deans and Counseling Center are working to determine the best way to support both students who need to remain on campus and students who will be at home and will be communicating with the student community. Faculty will arrange to hold office hours online.
On-campus events will be canceled beginning Thursday, March 12, for the remainder of the semester. This applies to the Joyce Contemplative Center as well. The Patriot League is actively assessing the spring athletics season, and more information will be provided shortly to those impacted. The Chaplain’s Office will follow up with information regarding campus liturgies.
Beginning Monday, March 16, all employees who can work at home will transition to working remotely. Each Vice President and division head will work with their divisions to determine how best to support this new way of operating.
Our campus will not be closed. Faculty will have access to office, studio and lab spaces as needed to conduct their courses or continue their research. Staff members will also have access to their offices as necessary. Employees who are responsible for life and safety will continue to come to work on campus. Most facilities, including dining, the library, and health and wellness facilities will remain open, only for those who have been given permission to remain on campus, although operating hours may change.
We have taken steps to protect our community members. Facilities has put enhanced cleaning protocols in place, disinfecting common areas such as classrooms and bathrooms daily and focusing on high-touch surfaces such as doorknobs. Health Services has protocols in place for evaluating patients who exhibit symptoms consistent with COVID-19. If you are experiencing fever or respiratory symptoms and have reason to believe you may have been exposed to COVID-19, please contact Health Services at (508)793-2276.
You will receive further communications shortly about moving logistics, housing, academic expectations, technical support, financial aid, employment and other topics to address your questions. Those communications will include information about who to contact with further questions. Please be patient for the next 24 hours as we work to get this information to you.
I fully understand that this is a radically different way for the College to operate. We are asking our students to upend their semester, leave classes, activities, friends and mentors abruptly. We are asking our faculty to creatively, and quickly, alter their planned coursework to ensure our students can finish the semester. We are asking our staff for flexibility as they continue their vital work to support our students’ education.
These are very difficult steps to take, particularly here at Holy Cross, where we place such value on the strength of our on-campus community. Being together is a large part of who we are. Because of the close bonds that we have, faculty, staff and administrators also are finding these decisions challenging but very necessary. We are particularly concerned about our seniors who are coming to the end of their four years here on Mount St. James, and will feel a tremendous sense of loss. This is not how any of us expected this semester would end, but we are in the midst of a global pandemic which requires painful choices for us all. I am confident that we will find creative ways to function as a community and to support each other even when we are not physically in the same place. And as people of Faith in this season of Lent, I believe that eventually we will find new life coming out of the sacrifices we are sharing together for the sake of the greater good.
I expect there will be many additional questions regarding teaching and learning, future events including senior week and commencement (about which no decisions have yet been made), human resources and financial issues. I ask that we all exercise patience as we work out the many details necessary to both mitigate the virus, protect the health of our community and to ensure students are able to finish their coursework for the semester. We will get answers to you quickly and continue to communicate with you regularly as we navigate this together. We will also continue to update our website with the latest information at holycross.edu/coronavirus.
I want to thank the many faculty and staff who have been working tirelessly over the past several weeks to protect the health and safety of our community, and I am grateful for the work they will do over the coming months to ensure that students are able to continue their studies throughout this rapidly evolving period of uncertainty. We have difficult times ahead, but I have seen time and time again the commitment of this extraordinary community to supporting and caring for each other and I know that this time will be no different. Thank you in advance for your flexibility and your patience as we work through this together.
Sincerely,
Philip L. Boroughs, S.J.
President
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Post by hc89 on Mar 11, 2020 15:30:41 GMT -5
Very tough way for our seniors to end their college careers...
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Post by hcpride on Mar 11, 2020 15:33:25 GMT -5
Not sure how that saves lives (given Coronavirus [COVID-19] and the college-aged) but it is certainly the trend.
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Post by alum on Mar 11, 2020 15:35:12 GMT -5
This line from Father B tells us all we need to know:
"While the health and safety of our students, faculty and staff are our first priority, it is also incumbent on us to do our part to ensure that the healthcare system does not become overwhelmed so that they are able to tend to the most critical needs."
We are men and women for others and the College has decided, as others have, to do its part.
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Post by HC92 on Mar 11, 2020 17:50:31 GMT -5
Feel terrible for the seniors.
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Post by rgs318 on Mar 11, 2020 17:54:20 GMT -5
It will certainly be memorable. I hope it keeps all of them safe and healthy.
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Post by cruskater31 on Mar 11, 2020 19:28:21 GMT -5
Giving students one day to leave campus? This is ridiculous Holy Cross! I still think it is better to have kids quasi quarantined in schools rather than home and in contact with vulnerable populations. They should offer discounted tuition, room and board. Glad I am not a senior!!
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Post by longsuffering on Mar 11, 2020 19:33:34 GMT -5
No mention of any partial refunds (long letter, I might have missed it.). There should at least be some money saved on food and utilities and part time help.
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Post by purplehaze on Mar 11, 2020 19:42:48 GMT -5
Lafayette just suspended all athletic competition through April 5th BC announced online learning for the rest of the semester but athletic events to take place without fans
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Post by longsuffering on Mar 11, 2020 20:25:48 GMT -5
Giving students one day to leave campus? This is ridiculous Holy Cross! I still think it is better to have kids quasi quarantined in schools rather than home and in contact with vulnerable populations. They should offer discounted tuition, room and board. Glad I am not a senior!! Just heard an official on radio refer to dorms as "Petri dishes" unfortunately.
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Post by timholycross on Mar 11, 2020 22:48:48 GMT -5
Do you old guys realize this is the 50th anniversary of a second semester ending in in chaos (because of Kent State)?
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Mar 12, 2020 7:27:08 GMT -5
HC was taking steps early-on to reduce / mitigate risk. See the set of communications to students and staff beginning in late February. www.holycross.edu/2019-novel-coronavirus-covid-19-informationA major concern at HC (and apparently for other schools as well) was the number of students who had traveled abroad over Spring break.
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Post by cruskater31 on Mar 12, 2020 8:39:32 GMT -5
Would it not be easier to send older professors and members of the community home to teach via distance learning rather than this approach?
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Post by hchoops on Mar 12, 2020 9:18:46 GMT -5
Young people can be carriers without getting sick. Young people can get sick. All four in my area are under 30. Rudy Gobert is young.
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Post by Tom on Mar 12, 2020 9:38:44 GMT -5
On some level, I could see a logic in keeping the kids here as the school could be a controlled environment of a low risk population. Shut down all the community service they do. No more volunteering at the nursing home. Now we're sending the low risk kids out from the petridish of their dorms out into the world to interact with their grandparents and at risk populations. More true for HC which is pretty much a contained community than a place like B.U. that is dumped in among the regular city
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Post by Sons of Vaval on Mar 12, 2020 9:50:28 GMT -5
I think we are seeing a snowball effect. When some "leaders" in the higher education community (Harvard, Ivy League tournament cancelled, NESCAC schools, et al) are closing their doors for the semester and sending students back home, the other schools will simply follow suit.
Tom, agree with you. I'm not sure why it is better to displace thousands of young people from a confined area and have them go back to their homes and communities where there are elderly people (parents and grandparents).
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Post by hcpride on Mar 12, 2020 9:52:25 GMT -5
Young people can be carriers without getting sick. Young people can get sick. All four in my area are under 30. Rudy Gobert is young. I think the point is that the virus is essentially not deadly to college-age kids who (may or may not) catch it. (This is not to suggest anybody wants young people to get sick from the flu or this or any other illness.)
It is also true that close living conditions facilitate the spread of viruses.
(An interesting tidbit, especially for those who are focused on Italy, is that in Germany the virus in question is not very deadly at all.)
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Post by HC92 on Mar 12, 2020 10:30:50 GMT -5
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Post by crusader12 on Mar 12, 2020 11:21:13 GMT -5
The entire USA is in a full blown panic. Get to the stores ASAP and stock up on food, ammo, etc.
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Mar 12, 2020 11:31:57 GMT -5
Let's say that 90% of schools cancel events/go to distance learning
(1) you are among the 90%. If it turns out to be the right thing to do, you're okay. If it turns out to have been panic-driven and ill-advised you're still okay because all the other schools did the same thing
(2) you are among the 10%. If it turns out that the cancellations/distance learning was the way to go, you're in deep trouble because you put your people at risk. If it turns out to be panic-driven and ill-advised you may be lcriticized for taking the chance and getting lucky (or was it being smart)
Conclusion--when the pack moves you are always safe (re: public opinion) in moving with it, whether the pack is headed for safety or off a cliff
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Post by longsuffering on Mar 12, 2020 11:52:22 GMT -5
Agree with pack mentality. It's the lone wolf who gets the feature on CNN when the students are all wearing space suits in the dorms.
But agree with shutting down because a two day Biogen conference in one hotel in Boston resulted in 70 of Massachusetts 92 cases. It's the potential of the disease running through 2500 residential students that could be worse than the hepatitis outbreak that forced the hand of TPTB.
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Post by Ray on Mar 12, 2020 12:29:09 GMT -5
You guys are too much. Do you really think this is just a pack mentality, rather than just a whole bunch of smart people coming to the same conclusion based on the information available? For instance, read this and then tell me you think that the sudden chorus of drastic action, across a wide range of industries and locales, is an overreaction: medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-act-today-or-people-will-die-f4d3d9cd99ca
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Post by alum on Mar 12, 2020 12:55:11 GMT -5
College kids are pretty great, and people who work at colleges can be great people, too. I have posted before about the fact that I have one daughter who is a Mount Holyoke alumna and another who is a student (now a junior) there. MHC will be sending the kids home with the start of Spring Break tomorrow and, although they hope to have commencement in May, don't know whether that will be possible. The MHC commencement is a two day affair full of traditions as you can imagine would be beloved at a historic women's college. The most famous is a Laurel Parade where seniors, dressed in white to honor the suffragists, march carrying a laurel chain to the grave of the college's founder where they sing, among other songs, the Alma Mater.
Concerned that they would not get a real commencement, the students, with college support, marched as best they could today. Faculty attended in academic regalia and other students cheered vigorously on the sidelines. The college publicized it late this morning and 4500 people watched it on Facebook Live. I watched a few moments of the archived video just now and it was awfully nice, during these lousy times, to see a bunch of young people taking care of each other with support from faculty and administrators.
I hope all graduating college students, especially at HC, find a way to celebrate together.
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Post by hcgrad94 on Mar 12, 2020 13:16:52 GMT -5
Giving students one day to leave campus? This is ridiculous Holy Cross! I still think it is better to have kids quasi quarantined in schools rather than home and in contact with vulnerable populations. They should offer discounted tuition, room and board. Glad I am not a senior!! How is a Wed 3PM announcement about a Sat 5PM closure one day?
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