We get “it’s safe, come out” propaganda about every other day from admin (while covid’s spreading as fast as you’d expect, hospitals filling/filled, etc.). A few days ago they sent out saying that the student population here was probably vaxed at the same rate as the local adult population, which is quite a high rate. How they ascertained that I don’t know, and they won’t say. The only data point I’m aware of their having, since we don’t require anybody to give any covid-related info, is wastewater testing in a couple of the dorms, which would work for a snapshot correlation. The problem: one of those dorms is the honors dorm, which is not a representative population for campus. What I would totally believe: honors vaxed at higher than local adult pop; other dorm vaxed at something inbetween state rate (around 35-40% by now, I’m guessing) and local adult rate. I’m hoping a local reporter will FOIA the info, which shouldn’t survive a HIPAA defense since it’s aggregate/anonymous.
We have a very high proportion of evangelical families, and I’m guessing that a few hundred kids’ first order of business once they got settled in was to go get their first shot, particularly if most of the other kids around them are vaxed. Like I said before, they apply social pressure with great facility. It’s unusual for a kid who shows up in a mostly-masked room to stay unmasked or return to class unmasked, especially if the prof gives a shove about it, which they’re not supposed to do but, happily, are doing anyway. In the near-universal-no-masking classes, there’s no move to put on the mask.
An interesting anecdotal divide: if what my daughter says is representative, the liberal-arts classes are masking at a far higher rate than the STEM classes are. Which I’m guessing you could correlate pretty handily to political stances, with the lib-arts kids here being significantly further left, also more likely to be from highly-educated families, than the STEM kids are. If that’s the case, or a significant part of the picture, it’d be interesting, how readily politics trump the education and seeming commitment to reason. It’d be an interesting connection with what I see on Linkedin, too, where the most aggressive anti-vax/anti-masker/covid-denialists seem to be technicians and BS-level engineers.
Also interesting: I’m teaching a couple of classes as a visitor to another course, zoom only, but have been having trouble with my connection lately, lot of dropped zooms as the modem resets. I’m quite worried about this for class, and if we weren’t in the middle of a surge I’d just go in and zoom-teach from my office. So I offered to (and will) make a backup recorded lecture just in case I don’t have this resolved before the week rolls around and my connection goes wobbly during class…and the professor whose course it is said meh, don’t put yourself out, they’re used to zoom trouble by now. Which is true, and I bet most of the students wouldn’t actually be worried if we had interruptions, would just shrug at the one more covid annoyance, especially since nothing high-stakes is going on. I can’t go with that, though, seems too unprofessional to me.