U of O, Carleton announce gradual return to in-person learning - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 06:59 AM | Calgary | -0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

U of O, Carleton announce gradual return to in-person learning

Post-secondary students at two Ottawa universities can expect a return to in-person learning in the coming weeks.

Universities hadn't planned to start this semester online Omicron changed that

Students walk by Tabaret Hall on the University of Ottawa campus in February 2020. In-person classes will resume at the end of January, the university said Wednesday. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Post-secondary students at two Ottawa universities can expect a return to in-person learning in the coming weeks.

While both the University of Ottawa and Carleton University had tentatively planned for in-person classes to resumeby the end of the month, that will only happen atthe U of O,on Jan. 31.

In a letter to students on Tuesday, Carleton University's president Benoit-Antoine Bacon said students would insteadreturn Feb. 7.

Bacon said the additional week will give students and staff more time to prepare and allow the university to assess how Ontario'spublic schools are faring, after they returned to in-person learning this week.

These announcements only apply to in-person courses planned for the winter semester. At both schools, many courses will remain virtual.

In a press release Wednesday, U of O president Jacques Frmont said COVID-19 hospitalizations and wastewater trends indicated this wave of thepandemic would be waning soon.

"This being the situation, it is essential that students be able to resume their normal activities, for their well-being and personal growth, including a return to classrooms and campus buildings," he said.

The winter semester at Carleton University was slated to have more in-person classes than the fall semester, but those plans were put on hold in mid-December when the Omicron variant ripped through the city.

At that time, Algonquin College and Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., announced plans to be online until March 6 and Feb. 28 respectively.

Kingstonhad the province's highest COVID-19 per capita rates of infection on recordin December.Queen's said it would decide in early February about how to move forward after the university's reading week, which runs from Feb. 22-25.

As of Wednesday evening, neither institution had announced changes to those plans.