
US: Chinese students’ visas revoked
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Coronavirus: ‘Rule of six’ comes into force as medics warn of second COVID-19 peak
September 15, 2020Introduction
This guidance applies nationally, but you should follow local public health guidance if restrictions are in place in your area.
This guidance builds on the existing guidance for reopening higher education (HE) campuses, and may be updated further in line with developing scientific evidence.
The latest update includes:
- further advice on reopening university buildings
- guidance on the importance of good ventilation
- guidance on when and where face coverings may be required
- updates on social gatherings relevant to higher education
- additional advice on the performing arts
- additional advice on student accommodation
- advice on local outbreaks, including student movement
- advice on NHS Test and Trace
The higher education (HE) system in the United Kingdom has a world class reputation. During the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, and with great agility, it has adapted to online teaching and learning, while HE providers have continued with some activities on campus, especially in their contribution to the fight against coronavirus (COVID-19) and the development of a vaccine.
The reopening of campuses for academic year 2020 to 2021 will bring about a mass movement of students from across the UK and overseas, with the vast majority moving from other regions into student accommodation in the region in which their HE provider is located. The creation of many new households brings with it a degree of risk, and we expect providers to take all reasonable actions to minimise this risk.
This guidance is designed to help HE providers in England to understand how to minimise risk during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and to provide services to students to ensure they can have an enjoyable experience, while staying as safe as possible. We recognise that providers have been working to prepare for safe reopening and this update is designed to support finalisation of these preparations and provide clarity on some issues raised by providers.
We hope this guidance gives you freedom within a practical framework to think about what you need to do to continue, or restart, operations during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. We understand how important it is that you can work as safely as possible and support the health and wellbeing of staff, students and the wider community in the current pandemic. This will ensure that providers can demonstrate that campuses are once again ‘open for business’ for this and future academic years, while minimising the risks to staff and students.
In the same way that you are making plans for academic year 2020 to 2021, prospective and continuing students will be making important decisions about their academic future. In spite of ongoing uncertainty, it continues to be important that you provide students with the right information at the right time. This includes making prospective and current students aware of any potential for changes at the earliest opportunity. We expect providers to ensure that continuing and prospective students receive the clear, accurate and timely information needed to make informed decisions. It is important that obligations under consumer protection law continue to be met, including in relation to information provision, terms and conditions, and complaints handling.
We expect HE providers to be open for academic year 2020 to 2021, although there may be some differences from previous years, reflecting the measures that you are putting in place to ensure that you are minimising the risks to students and staff, in accordance with public health guidelines.
The Office for Students (OfS), the HE regulator in England, has committed to protecting the interests of students – both domestic and international – throughout the present crisis, while ensuring quality and standards are upheld. The OfS has produced guidance for providers about quality and standards during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic which is clear that standards must be maintained. The Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA) has also produced guidance to support the sector in planning for the 2020 to 2021 academic year and will develop additional resources to support students to make positive transitions into higher education. We will continue to work closely with the QAA to ensure that students continue to leave university with qualifications that have real value, reflect their hard work and allow people to progress.
The key message of the government to the public is clear: we all must stay alert in order to control the virus and save lives. Guidance on how to protect yourself and others can be found at Coronavirus (COVID-19).
The UK government’s strategy for recovering from coronavirus (COVID-19) sets out a roadmap to easing existing measures in a cautious way that minimises the risk, subject to successfully controlling the virus and being able to monitor and react to its spread.
How to use this guidance
As HE providers, you will make your own judgements about your provision, while following the latest public health guidance. However, providers should also work alongside local authorities and other agencies to ensure that you have the right plans in place to control and manage any local outbreaks. This guidance is intended to help you make decisions about how you can make your facilities and other provision available in a way that minimises risks to all students – both domestic and international – and staff, in line with the government roadmap and guidance.
We set out below the range of advice and guidance we expect you to be taking into consideration when making decisions on when and how to reopen your campuses and buildings, as long as that can be done in line with public health advice applicable at the time.
Each HE provider will need to translate this into the specific actions you need to take, depending on the demographic profile of your staff and student bodies, the nature of your institution, including the size and type of institution, and how the institution is organised and operated.
We expect all providers to set out clearly what steps you have taken to ensure that staff and students can return, with confidence that these have been taken to reduce risks in their working or student environment, in accordance with government guidance.
To help you decide which actions to take, you should carry out an appropriate coronavirus (COVID-19) risk assessment, just as you would for other health and safety related hazards. The Health and Safety Executive provides a helpful risk assessment template and examples. This will inform the risk mitigations to make all sites and sections of your institution COVID secure.
Principles for higher education provision
Although some buildings and parts of campuses have physically closed in response to the outbreak of coronavirus (COVID-19), the provision of HE continued. In considering action to reopen buildings and campuses, we recognise that a great deal of work has been, and continues to be, undertaken by providers on planning for reopening the HE estate to staff and students. We encourage all providers to share best practice in order that there is a consistent approach to reopening that puts the health and safety of all students and staff at its heart and also recognises the importance of providing access to the high-quality provision that typifies our HE providers.
It is for an HE provider, as an autonomous institution, to identify and put in place appropriate plans, in line with this guidance and any other relevant government guidance, based on the individual circumstances of that provider.
In doing so, we expect that HE providers will give particular consideration to:
- the legal responsibilities of providers in taking steps to reopen: providers already have duties of care towards staff, students and visitors, including under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 and the Equality Act 2010. Providers will need to continue to comply with those obligations
Minimising the risk to students
As with other population groups, students are at greater risk of contracting the coronavirus (COVID-19) when mixing outside their regular controlled academic and social circles. While HE providers should communicate to students the importance of adopting safe behaviours generally, HE providers should also, where possible, support their students to socialise in COVID-secure environments (for example campus bars, Student Unions) and should identify safer social activities for students. You might do this in collaboration with your Student Union. We are aware of the planning already underway for Freshers’ events that provide COVID-secure entertainment activities in ways that comply with public health guidance.
Shielding
We expect that most students will be able to return full time (or part time for students on part time courses) in the autumn term.
A small number of students may still be unable to attend because they are:
- self-isolating or living with someone who is and/or has had symptoms or a positive test result themselves
- a close contact of someone who has coronavirus (COVID-19)
Shielding advice for all adults and young people was paused on 1 August. This means that even the small number of students who will remain on the shielded patient list can also return to their HE provider, as can those who have family members who were shielding. HE providers should take account of the current advice on shielding.
Risk assessments
As part of the process of opening up buildings and campuses to staff and students, you should produce risk assessments for both working and communal environments, which will vary significantly based on the needs and circumstances of individual providers and the demographic profile of your staff and student bodies. You should then consider proportionate mitigating measures. You should share your risk assessments with staff and staff unions.
Some people with particular characteristics may be at comparatively increased risk from coronavirus (COVID-19), as set out in the COVID-19: review of disparities in risks and outcomes report. If an individual with significant risk factors has concerns, we recommend that you discuss these with the individual and explains the measures the provider is putting in place to reduce the risks. You should try as far as practically possible to accommodate relevant additional measures.
Reopening buildings and campuses
In considering allowing people back onto campus, you should take account of public health guidance on staying safe outside one’s home and in public spaces. The public health guidance is to reduce social contact, maintain social distance, adopt good hand and respiratory hygiene measures, and self-isolate and get tested if you have symptoms.
Providers will find relevant guidance at:
staying safe outside your home staying alert and safe (social distancing)
It is the responsibility of HE providers to assess the risk of opening other buildings and to implement suitable precautions. Depending on the nature of facilities, the guidance on working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19) provides examples relevant to the HE sector.
Cleaning
You should introduce enhanced cleaning measures, including more frequent cleaning of rooms and shared areas that are used by different groups, and cleaning frequently touched surfaces, using standard cleaning products such as detergents. See the COVID-19: cleaning of non-healthcare settings guidance.
Ventilation
You should ensure that all indoor and covered areas have good ventilation in addition to other methods of risk reduction. This can help reduce the risk of spreading coronavirus (COVID-19) by aerosol transmission, so focus should be given to improving general ventilation. Poorly ventilated buildings are particularly conducive to virus spread. Where possible, poorly ventilated spaces should be adapted to improve ventilation or, if that is not possible, they should not be used as a teaching/learning location.
You should consider ways to maintain and increase the supply of fresh air, for example, by opening windows and doors (excluding fire doors). You will need to consider making provision for winter in those spaces which rely on the opening windows for ventilation. Also consider if you can improve the circulation of outside air and prevent pockets of stagnant air in occupied spaces. You can do this by using ceiling fans or desk fans for example, provided good and external ventilation is maintained. Air conditioning systems should rely on fresh rather than recycled air. You might consider whether some tuition in certain subjects can be conducted outside. Advice on this can be found in Health and Safety Executive guidance on air conditioning and ventilation during the coronavirus outbreak.
Social distancing on campus
You should consider how to reduce social contact and maintain social distance. This means keeping people 2 metres apart from those they do not live with, where possible. Where 2 metres is not viable, reducing the distance down to a minimum of 1 metre can be used but only if appropriate mitigation is in place. You should consider and set out the mitigations you will introduce in response to your risk assessment.
In order to determine what level of attendance is appropriate in HE settings and in conducting open days, outreach activity, and the assessment of prospective students on campus, particularly in the forthcoming academic year, you should conduct risk assessments in order to understand:
- the number of students and staff likely to be included in a learning space and how they can be accommodated as safely as possible
- the availability of staff, including contingency plans should individuals be self-isolating
- supporting services required in increasing the number of individuals on-site (for example, catering) and how they can be provided as safely as possible
- what measures, in addition to those that have already been put in place during the pandemic, will need to be in place to accommodate additional numbers (including additional cleaning required of spaces and equipment following use)
Segmentation
Segmentation (such as, the creation of small, sub-networks of students and staff) is one of the suite of possible measures to manage and mitigate risks, and to make it easier to identify and limit those who need to take action in the event of a case or outbreak.
Providers should understand the potential benefits of segmentation.
The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) has advised that the benefits of segmentation could be:
- reduction in the risk of transmission (smaller number of people to infect)
- easier to control (smaller number of known contacts)
- less disruptive (small number of people to quarantine or test)
Effective segmentation could reduce the potential size of outbreaks. Segmentation of student/staff populations (for example, by course, year group, accommodation, site and so on, and in teaching and accommodation situations) would support easier detection of linked cases and, if necessary, enable more targeted closure or quarantine. Use of segments may also mean that certain classes or student households could be quarantined instead of wider groups, minimising wider disruption.
However, SAGE recognises that there is no one model of segmentation that would apply equally across all providers. The SAGE report on principles for managing the transmission of coronavirus (COVID-19) has further examples.
Additional protective measures
Providers should identify and implement the range of protective measures required to comply with government guidance for safe workplaces, based on an assessment of the risks and requirements of each environment.
This should include (but is not limited to):
- enhanced cleaning measures, especially for frequently used areas, surfaces, touchpoints and washrooms
- increased availability of handwashing and hand sanitisation facilities where handwashing facilities are less readily available
- reducing congestion (such as at the start and end of day), including through considering measures such as changes to timetables to stagger arrival or departure times or reduce attendance on site
- utilising outdoor space
- managing entrance to, exit from and movement around buildings, as well as signage with such measures as one way entrances, exits and staircases – avoid use of lifts where possible
Some HE courses, such as vocational training, healthcare related courses, and the performing arts, may pose particular risks of aerosol, droplet and surface transmission and may therefore warrant increased consideration, for example, face coverings, ventilation or cleaning in accordance with guidance issued for the relevant professional working arrangements.
Any additional costs would be funded from existing budgets.
Face coverings
Face coverings should be worn as an additional risk mitigation measure by students, staff and visitors, where social distancing is difficult to maintain outside of teaching situations, such as in corridors and communal areas.
Face coverings should be worn by audiences for presentations, drama or musical performances, in line with government guidance for audiences of the performing arts.
Within teaching environments, HE providers should comply with the guidance on social distancing set out above. Where practical work requires close contact (for example, medicine, dentistry, nursing), use of face coverings or other protection should be in line with the relevant professional environment.
Where social distancing is difficult to maintain or good ventilation is difficult to provide, including workshops, laboratories, offices, libraries and teaching rooms, providers can adopt the use of face coverings as part of their wider COVID-secure measures, in addition to hand hygiene facilities and reduced access, provided the use of a face covering does not interfere with teaching and learning.
Face coverings are likely to be appropriate in many social settings, including any events hosted by student clubs and societies; their use should be in line with other relevant government guidance for similar settings.
Safe wearing of face coverings requires washing hands before and after touching them – including to remove or put them on – and the safe storage of them in individual, sealable plastic bags between use. Where a face covering becomes damp, it should not be worn and should be replaced carefully.
There may be further use of face coverings required within providers as part of agreed additional restrictions in response to an increase in risk levels locally.
Exemptions
In settings where face coverings are required in England there are some circumstances where people may not be able to wear a face covering. Universities and other HE providers should be mindful and respectful of such circumstances, noting that some people are less, or not, able to wear face coverings, and that the reasons for this may not be visible to others.
Individuals do not need to wear a face covering if they have a legitimate reason not to.
This includes:
- if someone has a physical or mental illness or impairment, or a disability, that means they cannot put on, wear or remove a face covering
- if putting on, wearing or removing a face covering would cause someone severe distress
Some students and staff may need to be able to lip-read, or see people’s faces, in order to communicate (there are companies now making lip-reading friendly face coverings).
There is further advice on exemptions contained in the face coverings guidance.
Social contacts
To prevent the spread of the virus, from 14 September there will be legal limits on the number of people that someone can spend time with in a group at any one time. Whether indoors or outdoors, people from different households must not meet in groups of larger than 6. This limit does not apply to:
- gatherings for educational or work purposes when reasonably necessary
- meetings of a single household group
- a support bubble which is more than 6 people
Venues following COVID-19 secure guidelines can host more than 6 people in total, but no one should visit or socialise in a group of greater than 6. It is also important that people from different households (who are not meeting as a support bubble) remain socially distanced. Further information on social contact rules, social distancing and the exemptions that exist can be found at Coronavirus (COVID-19): Meeting with others safely (social distancing).
In all cases, it is the responsibility of the HE provider to ensure that:
- all official events are in compliance with the guidance
- officially registered student groups are aware of their obligation to comply with this guidance
Local outbreak restrictions may limit gatherings to smaller numbers or impose additional restrictions. The legislation may be further amended as government guidance changes.
Student movement
The government is doing all it can to minimise the risks to HE staff and students, and the communities in which HE providers are located, in this unprecedented situation, while mitigating the impact on the provision of education.
We recognise that the mass movement of students, and the creation of new households, add a degree of risk, and we expect providers to take all reasonable actions with their students to minimise the risk of transmission.
A great deal of work has been, and continues to be, undertaken by HE providers to prioritise the health and safety of students, staff and local communities. We know that providers are working closely with their local communities, and we encourage all providers to share best practice in order to create a consistent approach to reopening.
In planning for the new academic year, providers should plan carefully to manage the risks arising from the numbers of students arriving on campus at the beginning of term. You will need to ensure that it is possible for students to maintain social distancing on arrival. You may want to consider staggering arrivals to avoid large numbers of students arriving at the same time, and provide clear guidance to students on safe travel.
We will continue to work closely with the sector, Public Health England and across government, to help minimise the risk of the coronavirus (COVID-19), and help providers put in place measures that apply in their particular circumstances.
International students and self-isolation
Providers and students will need to have regard to guidance on travelling to the UK. To keep the rate of transmission in the UK as low as possible, all international arrivals (both international as well as domestic students) will be required to complete a passenger locator form on arrival in the UK. Students travelling from countries not on our exemption list will need to self-isolate in their accommodation for 14 days. During this time there will need to be systematic arrangements for the provision of food and drink to avoid the necessity of them leaving their room or accommodation.
Students will need to have regard to transport guidance to ensure that they are safely travelling from their entry port to their accommodation (see Transport’ for further advice on using transport safely). While it is for HE providers to decide how they should support their international students, we believe it is important that you make every effort to welcome them to the UK, and your responsibilities start as soon as a student arrives in the country, if not before.
HE providers are responsible for ensuring their students are safe and well looked after during their self-isolation period. Existing guidance is available at isolation for residential educational settings.
Universities UK have also produced bespoke guidance for HE providers on how to prepare for and care for students who are required to self-isolate on arrival in the UK. We encourage providers to review this guidance when considering how best to support their international and other students arriving from overseas.
You should also consider the needs of students, including international students, who may be suffering hardship, or are limited in their ability to travel, as a result of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
Guidance for Tier 4 students and sponsors affected by changes to UK immigration and borders due to the coronavirus can be found at Tier 4 sponsors, migrants and short-term students.
International students and their sponsors can email the government’s Coronavirus (COVID-19) Immigration Help Centre at: CIH@homeoffice.gov.uk if they have any further questions about their visas.
Travel and transport
Transport will be important for students, and for many staff, who need to travel to the campus or other university buildings. Providers may also arrange transport. You will therefore want to have regard to the guidance for passengers and operators. Students and staff can help control coronavirus (COVID-19), and travel safely, by walking and cycling if they can. Where this is not possible, they could use public transport (avoiding the busiest routes and times where possible) or drive.
If you are travelling to university, make sure you follow the safer travel guidance:
- coronavirus (COVID-19): safer travel guidance for passengers
- coronavirus (COVID-19): safer transport guidance for operators
International students should work with their HE provider to plan their onward journey from the airport in advance. Where it is safe and practical, arrangements should be made to welcome new students at their point of arrival (see international students and self-isolation for further advice on supporting international students).
Information for students and staff planning to travel in the UK or overseas, and for those who are already overseas, is also available at travel guidance for educational settings.
Accommodation
Where students have contracted coronavirus (COVID-19) while in student accommodation, rooms and other facilities will need to be cleaned, following guidance on cleaning non-healthcare settings. Accommodation that has been vacant for over 72 hours will need standard, but thorough, household cleaning.
Forming new households
There is no prohibition on moving house where necessary, and anyone in England who wishes to move house can do so. This includes forming new households and moving into shared student accommodation and houses in multiple occupation (HMOs). Guidance for landlords and tenants on renting and coronavirus (COVID-19) is available.
However, repeat or frequent temporary changes in household unit will increase the risk of disease transmission and staying within the same household unit will facilitate test and trace activities in the event of coronavirus (COVID-19). It will be important to apply those public health measures necessary to protect the wellbeing of students living together and those staff assisting them. The position on households may be subject to change and students should check local and national guidance. Those forming new households should take account of the guidance on meeting people from outside your household for advice on household interactions.
Everyone involved in the moving process must follow the latest guidance on staying alert and safe (social distancing) to minimise the spread of the virus. Letting agents, HE providers and accommodation providers should also consider how best to conduct tenancy check-ins for new tenancies agreed while broader measures remain in place, taking care to follow government advice on social distancing.
Within student accommodation, you should seek to identify ‘households’, within which routine contact can be managed safely. These households will also form the units by which you will manage any response to a suspected or confirmed positive case. Your approach to deciding what constitutes a household will depend on the physical layout of the accommodation, taking into account who shares a kitchen/bathroom. A household in halls of residence is normally considered to be those students living in the same flat, or on the same floor, who share a kitchen and/or bathroom, rather than an entire block. Accommodation providers should make clear which kitchen(s) and/or bathroom(s) are intended for each household’s use.
If a household within student accommodation is not obvious, providers may need to identify students as belonging to households (these households may be greater than 6 people). There should be an easily accessible record of who is in each of these provider-defined households, and students should understand what constitutes their household for the purposes of guidance on interactions within and between households.
Students living in halls of residence, or HMOs, who develop symptoms of coronavirus (COVID-19) should self-isolate in their current accommodation. Students should discuss this with their HE provider, and with the manager of their halls if they are privately owned, or the landlord of their HMO.
If a resident has coronavirus symptoms, all residents in that household must isolate for 14 days, following coronavirus (COVID-19): guidance for households with possible coronavirus infection. Or read guidance on isolating in residential educational settings.
Compliance with guidance
HE providers are responsible for ensuring that they, as an institution, are following government guidance to ensure appropriate COVID-secure measures are in place.
Providers are also responsible for ensuring that staff and students are aware of the measures and guidance in place, and take action to promote the importance of complying with these.
This could include:
- regular communication to staff and students
- signs and posters to reiterate the rules
- a clear statement of expectations of student behaviour, for example a behaviour agreement
- compliance with guidance
Providers should consider incentives for compliance, and disincentives for non-compliance including, in serious cases, the use of disciplinary measures.
Communications about compliance
All universities should have communications strategies for students and staff, which will include principles such as:
- do not assume that everyone understands the official guidelines
- ensure the rationale for behaviours and protective measures is understood
- make COVID-secure behaviours the norm
- encourage an atmosphere within your institution that supports following COVID-secure behaviours
- involve staff and students when creating communications
- maintain consistent messaging and guidance
- consider the range of cultural backgrounds when developing communications and plans
Teaching and learning environments
We recognise that, for many HE courses, online teaching and learning works effectively and has a high degree of learner engagement (while it will also benefit those who are not able to physically attend). You should identify the appropriate mix of online and face-to-face content for each subject, reflecting what will maximise learning, as well as supporting staff or students who cannot attend campus, and enabling the provider as a whole to minimise transmission risk.
We have published guidance on working safely during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak which will be relevant to the HE estate. This guidance includes advice on carrying out a risk assessment to assess the risk of coronavirus (COVID-19), and the need to protect people who are at a higher risk. It points out that the Health and Safety Executive may take action to improve control of workplace risks if needed, for example through the issue of enforcement notices to help secure improvements.
Laboratories
There is guidance on working safely during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in the guidance on laboratories and research facilities. The same considerations should be applied to laboratory science teaching as well, if it can be done in a way that reduces risks to those using the facilities.
University libraries
University libraries are permitted to open in a COVID-secure way. The regulations which restricted the operation of libraries generally have been changed to allow public libraries to open from 4 July, provided they are COVID-secure.
You should follow NHS Test and Trace guidance, which applies to university libraries as well as public libraries.
Libraries Connected has drawn up guidance for public libraries to support reopening which may also be relevant for university libraries.
Sports training and teaching
Some providers will have programmes designed for ‘elite’ athletes (for example, athletes on elite development pathways). In such cases, the guidance on returning to training for elite sport will be relevant.
In addition, many providers will have their own gym and leisure facilities and the guidance for providers of grassroots sport and gym or leisure facilities may be relevant.
Performing arts
This section of the guidance is designed to help HE providers in England understand how to minimise risk during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak for Performing Arts provision in universities and specialist providers. Providers should also take account of the guidance contained in the document Working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19): performing arts, which is applicable to both professionals and non-professionals.
We recognise that providers are already doing a lot of work to ensure that performing arts provision can be carried out safely, and restart as much as possible, in the new academic year.
Activities can be undertaken in line with this and other guidance, in particular Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) guidance for professionals and non-professionals on Working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19): performing arts. DCMS commissioned further scientific studies to develop the scientific evidence on these activities, which has allowed for the reconsideration of these additional mitigations. However, these studies have also indicated that it is the cumulative aerosol transmission from both those performing in and attending events is likely to create risk. DCMS is continuing to develop a more detailed understanding of how to mitigate this potential aggregate risk, but in that context, organisations should follow the guidance set out here.
Performing arts courses, in normal circumstances, may involve a considerable amount of practical face-to-face teaching and assessment. Some providers have found alternative methods during the outbreak. You should consider new ways of delivering in-person teaching and assessment that adhere to guidelines on social distancing, so that all students can receive a high-quality academic experience in a way that protects both students and staff.
If face-to-face teaching or group sessions are required, particular effort should be made to maintain social distancing (2 metres, or 1 metre where this is not possible, provided steps are taken to otherwise mitigate the potential for transmission).
Teaching sessions
Tutors and staff should design sessions and rehearsals to avoid situations where students are unable to socially distance and, if this is not possible, reduce any time that students are not able to maintain social distancing.
Regard should be given to the number of students in teaching groups. Smaller teaching group sizes should be used where it is not possible to maintain social distancing. For example, you might consider reducing the sizes of casts in drama, the size of orchestras, or the number of students involved in movement sessions. Where this is not possible, you should take mitigating actions to reduce the risk of transmission between staff and students, such as holding the session in a larger and well-ventilated room.
Where social distancing cannot be adhered to, consider the use of technological solutions to reduce interactions, for example for one-to-one tutorials, rehearsals and practice and, if possible, for assignments. You might consider using booths, barriers or screens between individuals who are not part of a teaching group, between teaching groups and others, and between performers and any staff or students not participating at that moment.
You should ensure that no one is participating in in-person sessions if they are suffering with symptoms of coronavirus (COVID-19) or when advised to self-isolate.
Singing and playing wind and brass instruments
Additional mitigations, such as extended social distancing, were previously required for singing and playing wind and brass instruments, given concerns that these were potentially higher risk activities. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport commissioned further scientific studies to develop the scientific evidence on these activities, which has allowed for the reconsideration of these additional mitigations.
Students and staff can engage in singing and playing wind and brass instruments in line with this guidance and Working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19): performing arts but routine (2m) social distancing should be maintained.
Managing social and informal interactions
You should consider students’ desire to interact socially and creatively with other students as part of their educational experience. If possible, you could look to designate specific areas (‘creative spaces’) for students to socially and creatively interact beyond the usual teaching environment. These areas could include markings to allow for social distancing or the use of screens.
You should provide students with advice as to where these sorts of interactions would be appropriate, and how to do them as safely as possible.
If tutors are not present, students should take responsibility for these sessions, and for protecting themselves and others. This might include social distancing or cleaning instruments before use.
Equipment
Equipment, including instruments and props, is integral to many performing arts courses. Measures should be taken for handling equipment.
These include:
- students and staff should avoid sharing equipment if possible
- if equipment has to be shared, you should ensure there is increased handwashing before and after handling equipment
- ensuring regular and meticulous cleaning of all equipment, including shared instruments, desks, sound and lighting equipment, mics and battery packs
- handling of paperwork, including music scores, scripts and learning materials
Audiences
You should refer to the Working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19): performing arts guidance for advice about audiences.
You should consider whether there is a need for a live audience. Where it is essential to have an audience, for assessment and teaching purposes, they should be seated in accordance with social distancing. Staff and other students can watch rehearsals and performances, but they should avoid cheering or shouting. This is because of the potential for increased risk of transmission, particularly from aerosol and droplet transmission. You might consider mitigating actions, such as the use of screens to protect audience members where necessary or the use of face coverings.
Students should be prepared for the difficulties of performing without an audience, or with a reduced audience, especially if the production is particularly interactive.
Infection control
Test and Trace
Full details of the process for testing and contact tracing are set out in Higher Education COVID-19 Test and Trace Handbook published alongside this guidance.
Anyone who displays symptoms of coronavirus (COVID-19) can and should get a test as soon as possible. It is important to only get a test if you have coronavirus symptoms or have been asked to get tested. This will help make sure people who need a test can get one.
HE providers should ensure that staff and students are aware of all their options to access a test if one is required. In all cases, in addition to any local provision, tests can be booked online at Coronavirus (COVID-19): getting tested, or ordered by telephone via NHS 119 for those without access to the internet.
For those who test positive or who have been identified as a contact by NHS Test and Trace, further information is available in the guidance NHS Test and Trace: how it works. This sets out what you should do if you test positive or if you are a contact, and how NHS Test and Trace will work with you to stop the spread of the virus.
Providers should ensure that different elements of their premises, such as cafeterias, canteens or university libraries, should maintain records of those using those services in order to support NHS Test and Trace, and in line with government guidance on relevant types of provision. This means that NHS Test and Trace can contact people if, for instance, there is an outbreak linked to those premises and give them appropriate public health advice. There is information on supporting the tracing process in the guidance on maintaining records of staff, customers and visitors to support NHS Test and Trace.
New workplace guidance on the Test and Trace programme will be relevant to providers.
If a person is symptomatic, has tested positive (with or without symptoms), lives with someone who has symptoms or has tested positive, or has been identified as a contact by NHS Test and Trace, they should self-isolate immediately.
You should ensure that your students are safe and well looked after during their self-isolation period. The person who has tested positive must self-isolate for 10 days from when they first developed symptoms – or longer if they still have a high temperature. Other members of their household must continue to self-isolate for 14 days from symptom onset. Non-household contacts notified by NHS Test and Trace must self-isolate for a period ending 14 days after their most recent exposure to the person who has tested positive.
Self-isolating means staying in your home or place of residence and not going outside for any reason, including not travelling to a different place of residence. Existing guidance is available at isolation for residential educational settings. This may include practical support such as access to food, as well as support to continue or manage the impact on studies during isolation.
You should also ensure that you understand the NHS Test and Trace process, and how and when you should contact your local Public Health England health protection team in response to reports of cases, and how to get advice about all other questions relating to guidance from the DfE helpline number.
Public Health England health protection teams and local authorities will advise where testing as part of outbreak management is required. (Note: this will not always be required, and self-isolation is the way in which transmission is interrupted regardless of testing.)
HE providers should ensure that existing government guidance regarding contact tracing has been implemented.
Response to local outbreaks
The government’s aim is to return life to as close to normal as possible, for as many people as possible, as fast and fairly as possible; and in a way that avoids a new epidemic, minimises lives lost and maximises health, economic and social outcomes.
We are now able better to identify outbreaks at an early stage and take steps to ensure appropriate local intervention. It is inevitable that in any large population cases will arise from time to time – each individual case will not always indicate a wider outbreak but will require follow up to ensure all contacts are identified and are self-isolating.
Local outbreaks are identified and managed through investigation and follow up of individual cases. Continuous monitoring of the available data is needed and different approaches may be required according to local circumstances. See regular data on COVID-19 indicators in different parts of the country.
Follow up and investigation of cases, through NHS Test and Trace, Public Health England (PHE) health protection teams, and local authorities, will aim to identify plausible links between individuals that demonstrate where transmission is most likely to have occurred and help to define an outbreak. You should encourage staff and students to engage with NHS Test and Trace when invited to do so.
NHS Test and Trace enables self-isolation advice to be given to contacts of cases, but this relies on people being able to identify one another by name, and to provide adequate contact details for follow up. You should assist PHE health protection teams and local authorities in making risk assessments, based on your knowledge of layouts, student activities, groups, and COVID-secure measures in place, and in identifying individuals meeting the definitions of contacts, but where these contact details are not known.
You are responsible for ensuring that your students are safe and well looked after during their self-isolation period. Existing guidance is available at isolation for residential educational settings.
The COVID-19 contain framework sets out how national and local partners will work together to prevent, contain and manage local outbreaks. If a local area sees a spike in infection rates that results in localised community spread, relevant authorities will decide which measures to implement to help contain the spread.
HE providers should have a plan in place that assumes there is likely to be an increase in the number of cases, or an outbreak associated with their setting, and they may have to adapt elements of their provision at very short notice.
Plans should cover a number of scenarios including:
- increased prevalence of infection locally that requires interventions on the whole community, including students and staff
- a large-scale outbreak that may result in substantial restrictions implemented at a local level that impact on the activities of the university
- a localised outbreak in student accommodation
- a localised outbreak involving a particular student or staff member, faculty or department
Providers should work with the Director of Public Health in their local authority in order to control or manage any outbreak in an integrated fashion. HE providers should agree outbreak plans with their Directors of Public Health and share the plan with DfE.
If a provider is experiencing a rise in infection rates, or there is an increase in infection rates in the local community, a provider should work with their local Health Protection Teams and the Director of Public Health to determine the most effective measures that will help reduce transmission.
In certain instances, decision-making will be referred to the national level, and an area will be designated an area of intervention. The government’s Local Action Committee command structure may recommend some level of restriction to HE provision in such areas. In such a situation, restrictions will be implemented in a phased manner – the key aim being to retain face-to-face provision where it is possible to do so safely. These ‘tiers of restriction’ relating to teaching provision are outlined below.
Regardless of the tier of restriction currently in place for teaching provision, all providers, students and staff should comply with guidance issued on wider restrictions. National Institute for Health Protection (NIPH) will issue and regularly update guidance on how any additional restrictions imposed will apply to students moving between university and home. Unless told otherwise, in the event of additional restrictions being imposed locally during term, students should remain in their current accommodation and not return to the family home, which would increase the risk of transmitting the infection.
Explanation of tiers:
- Tier 1 (default position): HE providers are expected to provide blended learning, with face-to-face tuition, following the provisions of this guidance, and public health guidance, including, for example, the appropriate use of face coverings
- Tier 2 (fallback position): HE providers should move to an increased level of online learning where possible. Providers should prioritise the continuation of face-to-face provision based on their own risk assessment. We expect that, in the majority of cases, this will be for those courses where it is most beneficial (for example, clinical or practical learning and research)
- Tier 3 (where stricter measures are needed): HE providers should increase the level of online learning to retain face-to-face provision for priority courses (for example, clinical and medical courses), and in as limited a number of situations as possible. Students should follow government guidance published as part of any additional restrictions applied locally, including where this says that students should remain in their current accommodation and not return their family home or other residential accommodation to reduce the risk of transmitting the virus through travel. In these circumstances, providers should support students to do so by keeping services for students, such as university libraries and catering facilities, open
- Tier 4 (last resort): We expect the majority of provision to be online, with buildings open for essential workers only. This should include the continuation of essential research
In the event of a possible outbreak on site, you should refer to the relevant Education Action Card that relates to managing possible outbreaks in education settings.
Staff and student wellbeing
We recognise that many students and staff are facing additional mental health challenges, due to the disruption to study and working practices, and uncertainty caused by the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. It is important to understand that these are normal responses to an abnormal situation and some people will require additional support.
Student mental health and suicide prevention are priorities for this government. The Minister of State for Universities, Michelle Donelan, wrote to the Office for Students (OfS) and HE providers in March to highlight a need to focus on mental health and wellbeing across HE.
We continue to work closely with the HE sector to promote good practice and support students and providers during the pandemic. HE providers are autonomous institutions, independent from government, and have a duty of care to students when delivering services, including the provision of pastoral support, and taking steps to protect the health, safety and wellbeing of students. This includes responsibility to support students with mental health issues. It is for HE providers to determine what welfare and counselling services needed to provide for students to offer that support. You are experts on your own student population and are therefore best placed to identify the needs of your student body.
At the same time, we recognise that some students and staff will have additional mental health needs which cannot be met within the HE setting. NHS mental health services have remained open throughout the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, and community, talking therapies, and children and young people’s services, have deployed digital tools to connect with people and provide ongoing support. We expect mental health services to liaise with local partners to ensure referral routes are understood, and we encourage HE providers to work in partnership with local NHS and care services to address any additional needs arising from the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
The government has worked closely with the OfS to help clarify that providers can draw upon existing funding to provide hardship funds and support disadvantaged students impacted by coronavirus (COVID-19). HE providers were able to use OfS Student Premium funding worth around £23 million per month for April to July this year, and £256 million for academic year 2020 to 2021, starting from August, towards student hardship funds, including the purchase of IT equipment and mental health support, as well as to support providers’ access and participation plans.
We have also worked with the OfS on the recently announced Student Space platform, which seeks to bridge gaps in mental health support for students arising from this unprecedented situation. Funded with up to £3 million by the OfS, and led by Student Minds, it is designed to work alongside existing mental health services offered by providers. This is a new online resource until the end of 2020 which enables your students to access a variety of mental health and wellbeing support. But it should not be assumed that it provides a substitute for providers’ student support services or for access to NHS care.
The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic will also put increased strain on the health and wellbeing of staff. The guidance on safer workplaces acknowledges the responsibilities that employers have for their staff. We welcome the agreement between trade unions working in HE and the Universities and Colleges Employers Association, published as Appendix A to Universities UK’s principles and considerations for emerging from lockdown, that will help ensure campuses are as safe as possible, and protect the health and wellbeing of staff, students and visitors to campus.
There may be a need for continuing support as campuses start to reopen, and the protective measures to keep people as safe as possible while away from home take on even greater importance. There is guidance on mental health and wellbeing at COVID-19: guidance for the public on mental health and wellbeing.
First aid
Emergency treatment, for example the provision of first aid, should be prioritised and given promptly in the event of an emergency. This means that people do not have to stay 2 metres apart if emergency assistance is required. People involved in the provision of assistance of others should pay particular attention to hygiene measures immediately afterwards, including washing hands.