4-30-2020

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CAMPUS CLEARED, 3 Students adapt to life during the pandemic.

SENIORITIS, 8

CELEBRATIN G

50

YE A RS

O F

COVI D -19

THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 2020

CONSPIRACY, 13

Senior year takes a hit from social distancing.

E-SPORTS, 11

Misinformation is the real COVID-19 conspiracy. I N DE PE N DE N T AT

B O STO N

STU D E NT

BU sports teams adjust to working remotely. J O U R NA LI S M

U N IVE R I STY

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR L. VOLUME XCVIII. ISSUE VII

BU’s dynamic response to the COVID-19 outbreak Pandemic leads to remote learning

BY SAMANTHA KIZNER DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

Boston University President Robert Brown announced classes would be held online from March 16 to April 13 as a result of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak in an email March 11. The same day, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak a pandemic, prompting BU to announce March 17 that remote learning would extend through the end of the Spring 2020 semester. In the initial March 11 announcement, students were encouraged to not return to campus if they had already departed for spring break. In the March 17 announcement, this suggestion became a plea for students to vacate their residences as soon as they could. The university recognized the disruptions these new circumstances would cause for students, but maintained that they must put the health and safety of students, faculty and staff first. “I recognize that this is a painful decision for all our students, who thrive on the interactions with others as part of their experience as members of the Boston University community,” Brown wrote. “I know this is especially difficult for our seniors and other candidates for graduation who undoubtedly have questions about how we will celebrate their achievements.” As these announcements shaped what the semester would look like for students in Boston, those in study abroad programs were also receiving word of how the pandemic would affect their semester. Executive Director of Study Abroad Gareth McFeely updat-

BY MELISSA ELLIN DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

ANGELA YANG/ DFP FILE

Benches outside the George Sherman Union stand empty as Boston University’s campus remains largely deserted. The university has developed a COVID-19 recovery plan detailing how to ensure students can return to campus for the fall semester.

ed students on the severity of the impact COVID-19 would have on their programs in a series of emails. While certain programs, such as those in Shanghai, were canceled as early as Jan. 27, others, such as those in New Zealand and Australia, didn’t instruct students to return home until as late as March 17. The forced return to the U.S. prevented many students from continuing experiences such as internships, though certain students were able to continue working remotely. This was the case for Oksana Chubrikova, a junior in the Sargent College of Health and

Rehabilitation Sciences, who was studying Auckland, New Zealand. “I’m in contact with my supervisor back in Auckland about doing some kind of remote research project,” Chubrikova said, “but I’m really in the works of trying to figure out how to continue it.” Despite the toll COVID-19 had taken on the university’s original plans for the Spring 2020 semester, it wasn’t until March 25 that there were three confirmed cases on-campus. Two students and one staff member were confirmed to have cases of the virus, according to Colin Riley, a BU spokesperson.

At the time of this information’s release, Riley said the university had no knowledge of these cases when asking students to vacate campus a week prior. He said the university only became aware of the infections a day before the publication of a BU Today article that revealed the cases. “When we were asking students to relocate on campus, from particular residences because they were suitable to the use of putting students in there who needed to be isolated, that activity preceded the decision to ask students to CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

Professors and students have navigated the nuances of remote learning since Boston University President Robert Brown’s March 17 announcement that classes would remain online through the end of the Spring semester. This has largely been through Zoom, a video conferencing service that universities and organizations across the globe have started using for schooling, work and general communication to comply with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on social distancing and quarantining. In addition to Zoom, professors have been communicating with students via emails and Blackboard announcements. Blackboard is also the main platform on which exams have continued. Learning how to provide and receive remote education has proved challenging for all parties involved. Professors must find quiet places to hold live lectures, potentially record them for later viewing and deal with students’ abilities to employ or reject their microphone and camera features. Students like Grace Helmke, a freshman in the College of Fine Arts, find themselves unable to continue work in certain courses, or forced to work in suboptimal conditions without the equipment or space necessary for some classes. Helmke is enrolled CONTINUED ON PAGE 4

Homebound residents donate homemade masks Boston, from buzzing to bunkered

BY KASIA JEZAK DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

With coronavirus infections rising and personal protection equipment dwindling, health care workers across the country continue to risk their lives with limited supplies. In Massachusetts, some residents have been spending much of their quarantine sewing homemade face masks to donate to hospitals and other care facilities quickly running low on surgical and N95 masks. The practice has been gaining traction nationwide as people, especially those who cannot donate financially, find new avenues to help relieve an overwhelmed health care system. Mohamad Yasmin, a physician and team lead for the Massachusetts COVID-19 Academic Public Health Volunteer Corps, said he has watched the mask deficit grow as people, health care workers included, began hoarding out of panic.

BY ANGELA YANG DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

SOPHIE PARK/ DFP FILE

An ambulance speeds by the Boston Medical Center. While health care workers in hospitals around the country have struggled with supplies of personal protective equipment, ventilators and coronavirus test kits, volunteers have started remotely tracing confirmed cases of the coronavirus in order to stop the spread.

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Much of the bustling city of Boston is on self-enforced lockdown. Daily life is in a state of transformation as residents learn to live in homebound isolation. The streets of lay almost bare and rush hour traffic is virtually nonexistent. But signs of life persist even as all normalcy seems to wane: A man walks his dog with a face covering on. Customers stand six feet apart in line at the grocery store. An elderly couple carry their purchases home as an oncoming jogger steps out onto the street to create a wide berth as they pass. Several small businesses are now shuttered, while others struggle to survive. Many lines of work have shifted to remote operation. How did we get here? The novel coronavirus first CONTINUED ON PAGE 4


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4-30-2020 by The Daily Free Press - Issuu