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Re: VPA's decision



Transit, like corridors and classrooms on campus, is a situation with controlled behaviour, not an uncontrolled social situation. In my use of buses and skytrains recently, I’ve seen almost everyone wearing their masks properly and they’re not nearly as crowded as they used to be. I was worried about more crowded buses at the beginning of fall term when we went back to classrooms, but my students reported very good and safe-feeling experiences.

Nicky


From: Brian Fisher
Sent: January 12, 2022 5:17:00 PM
To: academic-discussion@sfu.ca
Cc: Nicky Didicher; academic-discussion@sfu.ca; SFU Faculty Association
Subject: Re: VPA's decision
 
Does Dr. Henry’s assessment include travel to and from the university on bus and skytrain?

Beat wishes 
Brian 

Brian D. Fisher, Ph.D.
Professor | School of Interactive Arts and Technology

Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology | Simon Fraser University
Rm. 7475 | 13450-102 Avenue, Surrey BC, V3T 0A3
T: 778-782-7554 | siat.sfu.ca/ | Find us on social media: @siatsfu


At Simon Fraser University, we live and work on the unceded traditional territories of the Coast Salish peoples of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.


To:
On Jan 12, 2022, at 1:53 PM, Lyn Bartram <lyn@sfu.ca> wrote:

While I appreciate that Dr. Bonnie states that structured settings do not show evidence of more transmission, I wonder where the source of her data are. If these data come from universities, we need to ask whether there are vaccine mandates in those environments. For example, BC is the only province where universities and colleges are PROHIBITED from requiring vaccines.

This means if a lot of the data around post-secondary learning environments and CoVid transmission comes from places where vaccines are required the results are much less applicable to our case.

 

I note that many Canadian universities are being much more cautious, choosing to wait out the Omicron spread until mid-late February. I, for one, am not comfortable coming back to campus at the end of January.

 

Lyn Bartram
Professor | School of Interactive Arts + Technology

Director | Vancouver Institute of Visual Analytics
Simon Fraser University | Surrey
250, 13450 102 Ave., Surrey, B.C. V3T 0A3
T: 778.782.7439 | M: 604.908.9954 | www.sfu.ca/~lyn

https://www.sfu.ca/content/sfu/sfumail/using-sfu-mail/mail/managing-mail/set-up-signatures/jcr:content/main_content/image_3.img.2000.high.png/1571771557592.png

 

“Be kind, be calm and stay safe” -Dr. Bonnie Henry, BC Provincial Health Officer

 

From: Nicky Didicher <didicher@sfu.ca>
Date: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 at 1:48 PM
To: "academic-discussion@sfu.ca" <academic-discussion@sfu.ca>
Cc: SFU Faculty Association <faculty_association@sfu.ca>
Subject: Re: VPA's decision

 

I, personally, was happy and relieved to have the VPA confirm that we're going back to in-person teaching. 

 

In Dr. Henry's directive to universities and colleges I was especially struck by the following points:

• With every variant, including the Omicron variant, transmission has been observed to occur in households and unstructured social settings. There is no evidence that moving to online post-secondary instruction will decrease such interactions, noting that students would spend fewer hours in structured settings, which have a lower risk for transmission. 

• Since structured educational settings do not amplify transmission, a move to online instruction is not an effective means of reducing COVID-19 among students, faculty, and staff, or in the wider community. 

• The previous move to online post-secondary education in 2020 and 2021 was associated with significant negative consequences for post-secondary students, who reported significantly poorer and worsening mental health and greater negative economic impacts than other British Columbians. 

• The recommendations of public health and Orders of the Provincial Health Officer are based on careful and ongoing assessment of the factors that increase risk and the interventions that are known to effectively reduce risk.

 

Nicky Didicher

English


From: Anthony Perl <aperl@sfu.ca>
Sent: January 12, 2022 12:31:36 PM
To: Craig Scratchley; James Fleming; academic-discussion@sfu.ca
Cc: SFU Faculty Association
Subject: Re: VPA's decision

 

 Thanks, Craig, for clarifying the context.

 

Now, we can see that by channelling our Radical Campus spirit, SFU has created a major opportunity for public health researchers to identify the impacts and outcomes of in person learning versus remote learning during a pandemic surge. 

 

UBC will remain the control case, while SFU faculty and students will become the treatment group in this population level experiment in learning how to live with Covid.

 

Anthony

 

On 2022-01-12 12:14 p.m., Craig Scratchley wrote:

I guess this is what James Fleming was referring to:

 

      https://broadcastemail.ubc.ca/2022/01/12/covid-19-update-on-winter-session-term-2/?utm_campaign=&utm_content=1642016386&utm_medium=sprout&utm_source=twitter

 

     Craig 

broadcastemail.ubc.ca

If you are a manager of staff whose work is not computer-based, please print this email and display it in a common work area for them to review. To all our students, faculty and staff, we hope you had a restful holiday and a happy New Year. As we enter 2022, we know the Omicron […]

 


From: James Fleming <james_fleming@sfu.ca>
Sent: January 12, 2022 12:03:28 PM
To: academic-discussion@sfu.ca
Cc: SFU Faculty Association
Subject: VPA's decision

 

In light of the recent communiqué from SFUFA--and breaking news from UBC--I just want to say that I for one applaud SFU's decision to return to in-person teaching, as planned, on January 24th. Cheers!  JD Fleming, English

 

 

-- 
Anthony Perl
Professor and Director of Urban Studies 
Professor of Political Science
Simon Fraser University
#2111 - 515 West Hastings Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 5K3
 
Tel: 778-782-7887
Fax: 778-782-5297
e-mail: aperl@sfu.ca
 
Simon Fraser University respectfully acknowledges 
the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish), 
səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh), q̓íc̓əy̓ (Katzie), 
kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlem), Qayqayt, Kwantlen, Semiahmoo 
and Tsawwassen peoples on whose unceded traditional 
territories our three campuses reside.