糖心Vlog

Imperial puts more teaching online as Omicron spreads on聽campuses

Oxford reports 33 per cent increase in Covid-19 cases in a week, with many of them the new variant

Published on
December 10, 2021
Last updated
December 20, 2021
Imperial College London
Source: iStock

Imperial College London has moved non-essential teaching online for the final days of term amid mounting concern about the spread of聽the Omicron variant of聽Covid-19 on UK聽university campuses.

In a , Emma McCoy, Imperial鈥檚 vice-provost (education and student experience), said the institution was 鈥渆xperiencing rapidly rising Covid-19 case numbers, including Omicron, both in the wider community and on campus鈥.

鈥淲e need to take urgent measures to reduce the spread of the virus and keep the community safe,鈥 Professor McCoy said. 鈥淔rom tomorrow, we are asking staff to move teaching online for the final days of term. Where in-person teaching is essential, we will continue 鈥 in聽small groups and with social distancing.

鈥淓ssential research will continue with our existing Covid-19 safety protocols, so research staff and students will be on campus in line with this policy.鈥

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Imperial鈥檚 message came shortly after the Department for Education said English universities should continue delivering face-to-face teaching and should not shift tuition online, with just a few days left of the autumn term.

Professor McCoy said Imperial鈥檚 Covid safety measures 鈥渉ave enabled us to deliver significant levels of in-person teaching this term already, and we are committed to keeping鈥rogrammes on聽track鈥.

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She urged students to 鈥減ostpone or reduce in scale any Christmas or end-of-term celebrations you may have planned鈥.

In a , Ian Walmsley, Imperial鈥檚 provost, urged 鈥渁ll staff to postpone Christmas parties or large on-campus gatherings鈥. He said the institution would 鈥渟upport students as we allow them to leave campus and their halls of residence early, in the many cases where their final week of studies can be taught remotely鈥.

Separately, the University of Oxford confirmed that there were 170 active Covid cases at the institution as of 8聽December, an increase of 33聽per cent on the previous week, with many of these confirmed as being the Omicron variant.

A university spokeswoman said there had been 鈥渁聽significant rise in the number of Covid-19 cases at the university in recent days, including confirmed cases of the Omicron variant鈥.

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鈥淎ffected individuals are isolating in line with government guidance, and their contacts are also being notified and asked to isolate,鈥 the spokeswoman said.

鈥淥xford University is following all the new guidance introduced by the government in response to the Omicron variant and is taking additional steps in light of the high concentration of cases around the university. Staff and students are being advised of these new steps today and also encouraged to use the public mobile testing unit now established in Radcliffe Square, along with our existing early alert service.

鈥淭he health and welfare of our staff and students is our number one priority. The university remains in constant close contact with the public health authorities about the situation and is following their advice.鈥

The DfE guidance says that administrative staff who are聽not involved in the delivery of face-to-face tuition should work from home where possible, but that the 鈥渕ajority鈥 of staff are expected on campus to deliver teaching and support services.

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Many UK universities have been delivering large lectures online during the autumn term because of concerns over Covid-19, but most smaller group teaching has been taking place in聽person.

chris.havergal@timeshighereducation.com

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