Duke University has announced it will hold classes remotely early in the spring semester.
Citing the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, Duke said all classes will be held remotely through Jan. 8. In-person instruction is scheduled to resume Jan. 10, but all students will be required to receive a COVID booster shot and a negative COVID test before returning to campus.
University spokesman Michael Schoenfeld says the move is to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
鈥淏ecause we start pretty early in January compared to many other institutions, we did want to take a little bit of a pause, and have remote classes for the first three days of the semester,鈥 he said.
Schoenfeld says that pause will allow the university to assess case counts early in the year and then decide whether to extend remote learning.
The university already requires all faculty, staff and students to be fully vaccinated. And it will require booster shots as well.
UNC-Chapel Hill leaders said Wednesday they'll announce any changes to the spring semester calendar before Jan. 3. They said unvaccinated students and all students living in residence halls must have a negative COVID test within 72 hours before returning to campus.
State health leaders in North Carolina said Tuesday that nearly 1,700 people are hospitalized from the virus that causes COVID-19.
In sports, the Atlantic Coast Conference 鈥 which both Duke and UNC play in 鈥 has changed its rules about games that are canceled because of COVID-19. If a men's or women's basketball team doesn't have seven players available because of positive COVID-19 tests, their game will now be declared a "no contest." Under the previous rule, the team forfeited.
The change is retroactive, meaning games the Boston College men and Miami women already lost due to forfeits are now considered "no contests鈥 and won鈥檛 count as a loss on their records.
Wake Forest鈥檚 football team now needs a new opponent for the Gator Bowl after Texas A&M pulled out due to COVID-19 issues within its team. The game is set for Dec. 31 in Jacksonville, Florida.
Disclaimer: Michael Schoenfeld sits on the 瓜神app board of directors.