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SUNY chancellor visits Potsdam, Canton campuses as they prepare for new semester

Posted 1/29/21

POTSDAM — State University Chancellor Jim Malatras visited SUNY Canton and Potsdam on Thursday to meet with school presidents Zvi Szafran and Kristin Esterberg as pre-semester testing takes place …

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SUNY chancellor visits Potsdam, Canton campuses as they prepare for new semester

Posted

POTSDAM — State University Chancellor Jim Malatras visited SUNY Canton and Potsdam on Thursday to meet with school presidents Zvi Szafran and Kristin Esterberg as pre-semester testing takes place on their respective campuses for all students.

Both campuses have moved to weekly testing of all students, faculty, and staff in alignment with SUNY policy to do so during the spring semester.

Spring classes will begin for both campuses on Monday, Feb. 1, with limited in-person classes for students testing negative for COVID at Canton, and Feb. 15 for SUNY Potsdam to allow for staggered testing and quarantining on campus for all students.

In order to continue to lessen the density of people on campus, in-person classes for the spring semester will be limited, and both campuses have enhanced their online learning and virtual engagement further in order to provide robust options for students and faculty.

“Our campuses are prepared to meet any challenges that arise this spring semester and are utilizing resources to provide the best educational experience for our students,” Chancellor Malatras said in a prepared statement. “That is certainly true at SUNY Canton and SUNY Potsdam, where students, faculty, and staff are energized for the new semester. So far pre-testing at Canton and Potsdam have resulted in no positive cases, but we will remain diligent. My thanks to the Presidents and their teams, our faculty who are with students in-person and online to give them the high-quality education that was promised, and our students for staying strong, doing what is right to protect the campus and neighboring community, and for staying on their path to a degree.”

“Our reduced on-campus population; online, hybrid, and flex class delivery; and rigorous testing plans help ensure the safety of the greater Canton community. Our online programs have continued to grow and progress over the past 15 years. The pandemic created an increased demand for an area where we were already excelling. We’ve expanded the number of programs offered online and will continue to do so for years to come. Our creative faculty members are innovating new modalities to meet the needs of our students and all learners,” Szafran said in a prepared statement from SUNY.

“As we welcome students back, we are grateful to Chancellor Malatras for his leadership in our COVID response. I believe that our strong relationships with our neighbors and our community partners were integral to the remarkable safety of our fall semester. By increasing our surveillance testing to ensure that all on-campus and local students are tested weekly—and to be able to offer this to our faculty and staff as well—I am confident that as a community we can work together to stop the spread, both on campus and throughout the region,” Esterberg said in a prepared statement from SUNY.

Malatras announced that all SUNY campuses will increase the frequency of SUNY’s mandatory COVID testing to weekly testing of all students, faculty, and staff who regularly report to campus. Healthcare students who have volunteered to help with COVID response will be made available to campuses to help administer tests. To date, approximately 2,500 students have signed up to volunteer. Since the 2020-2021 academic year began in August, SUNY has conducted 748,152 tests with a 0.60 positive percentage rate. Preliminary data suggests in-person instruction has not been a vector of the spread. As the semester progresses, SUNY will revisit the 100 percent weekly testing requirement depending on the positivity rate in the state and regions throughout the course of the semester.

As part of the campus visits, Malatras is meeting with students, faculty, staff, and local officials as he reaffirms the spring semester guidance, which was announced last November, and includes pre-testing of all students prior to the start of the semester, mandatory pre-semester quarantine of students, mandatory mask wearing at all times, even when socially distanced, no spring break, uniform compliance and enforcementstandards, expanded mental health and wellness services, and a student’s bill of rights for greater transparency.

SUNY Canton will be updating its testing schedule in line with Chancellor Malatras’ guidance for weekly testing. The plan focuses on ensuring a smooth transition from testing to quarantining before classes begin, as well as high-quality online teaching and learning. Some specifics within SUNY Canton’s plan includes reopening testing at multiple locations to increase accessibility for on-campus and commuter student populations; move-in testing sites in the residence halls are designed to rapidly test as many students as possible as they return to campus for the semester;s tudents will quarantine until their test results are known—on campus or at their homes--which is typically about 48 hours; students, faculty and staff are all participating in a daily health screening and weekly testing; 479 courses, or 62 percent, being offered virtually, 78 courses, or 10 percent are a hybrid distribution of modalities, and 218, or 28 percent, in-person; limited number of students residing on campus at 612, down from full capacity of 1,175; and fewer student on campus with about 1,395 students registered for at least one in-person class, down from 2,307 last year.

Also, as part of SUNY’s spring guidance, campuses are sharing a “What Students Should Know” plain language informational notice, or bill of rights, so all students know what to expect at individual campuses, such as how many courses will be online, hybrid, or in person.

SUNY Potsdam’s spring reopening plan may be found here, and includes the initial weekly testing and quarantining program on campus. Some specifics within SUNY Potsdam’s plan include: weekly testing for all residential students, all students in applied learning experiences, students with any reason to come to campus, and all students living within a 15-mile radius of campus, as well as for all Watertown students studying in Potsdam’s programs at Jefferson Community College; self-administered weekly testing for all faculty and staff with any reason to report to campus, including dining services staff; students must self-quarantine and study virtually at home or in their residence halls until two rounds of testing have been completed, with in-person classes and activities beginning on February 15th; 61 percent of courses are being offered virtually for the spring semester; limited number of students residing on campus, at approximately 900, down from full capacity of 1,550; and fewer students on campus and in the community this semester, with about 1,900 students residing on campus, living locally, or expected on campus for work or to utilize services, down from about 3,069 last spring.