Provost Communications - Summer 2020

Message From the Provost to Faculty & Staff: Academic Calendar and Other Updates

May 22, 2020
 

Dear Colleagues,

As a follow-up to last week’s Comprehensive Community Update, I share additional guidance about our academic calendar, fall planning survey, campus access, and preparation guidelines for fall. I remain indebted to you for your commitment to delivering our high-quality educational experience. Together, we are carefully planning for the fall semester and assuring that our decisions are anchored in our guiding principles, advancement of our mission, our commitment to health and safety, and our pursuit of academic excellence. For fall to be a success, we must continue adapting together with flexibility, patience, and a shared vision for how we support our students.

Academic Calendar
As I outlined in our May 14 town hall meeting, we have been considering changes to the academic calendar. After receiving updated guidance from the Department of Education and in continued consultation with, and advice from, our EOC recovery groups, the Deans’ Council, the Faculty Senate, and faculty members, we reconsidered the original plans I described and instead offer the following approach for fall 2020:

  • Our fall semester will be on a 16-week calendar, with instruction beginning on Aug. 31 and concluding on Dec. 11. Finals take place the following week.
  • The last day of in-person instruction will be Nov. 24. Following Thanksgiving break, from Nov. 30 to the end of the semester, instruction, as well as final examinations, will only be conducted remotely.
  • Classes within time blocks will be staggered and there will be 30 minutes between classes to allow for physical distancing.
  • We will not observe Autumn Day.
  • The short January (“J”) term, which was proposed in earlier discussions, will not be employed.
Key fall semester dates are:
  • Aug. 31, 2020: First Day of Instruction
  • Sept. 7, 2020: Labor Day
  • Nov. 24, 2020: Last Day of In-Person Instruction
  • Nov. 30, 2020: Remote Instruction Begins
  • Dec. 11, 2020: Last Day of Instruction
  • Dec. 14-18, 2020: Finals
For spring 2021, we are planning a 16-week semester beginning Jan. 11, as scheduled. Spring break will coincide with our Easter break and start the Tuesday before Easter, with instruction resuming the Tuesday after Easter. The Monday before Easter will be designated as a remote learning day to allow for maximum travel flexibility.

Faculty Planning Survey and Engagement
  • I am grateful for the valuable input from the nearly 850 full- and part-time faculty who responded to our Fall Semester Planning Survey. Though we may not be able to honor everyone’s requests, we sought as many perspectives as possible, and I believe we distilled them effectively. Next week you will be receiving a communication from Human Resources that will provide information and instruction on how to request an accommodation.
  • After continued consultation with the Faculty Senate president, we added faculty representation to the EOC recovery groups.
Preparing for Virtual Instruction
While we move forward with plans to resume on-campus instruction for fall 2020, all faculty will need to be prepared to transition their classes to remote learning, should circumstances surrounding the pandemic change before or during the fall semester. Such a change could occur with no advance notice, so we must have the capacity to “flip the switch” at any time. As a reminder, I strongly encourage you to attend additional faculty workshops on remote instruction during summer, and to complete the e-faculty training if you have not already done so. Excellent virtual and hybrid instruction involves distinct pedagogical principles that you may consider incorporating into your course design and teaching practices. Further information about training opportunities can be found here.

Faculty Campus Access June 1 – 9
In support of summer instruction, research, and preparation for the fall, we are providing a final campus access period during the summer so that you may retrieve critical items from your office. Given the Safer at Home order, we must exercise care in staggering brief visits in the coming weeks. Please sign up for one, 1-hour time slot here. To facilitate your access, assure the safety of you and others, and to ensure that Public Safety is expecting you, please sign-up a minimum of 48 hours in advance; you may not sign-up the day before or for same-day visits.

The following schedule provides times available from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day for specific buildings:
  • June 1-3: Burns Fine Arts Complex, Pereira Hall and Annex, Foley, Foley Annex, Doolan, St. Roberts Hall, University Hall;
  • June 4-6: East Hall, Research Annex, North Hall, Engineering and Design Center, South Hall, Life Sciences Building, Comm Arts, University Hall;
  • June 7-9: Xavier, Seaver, Hilton, University Hall.
Please note, LMU continues to abide by state, county, and city public health mandates:
  • Campuses remain closed, with the exception of resident students, essential personnel, and permanent residents, until we announce the reopening;
  • Anyone approved to access campus must wear a face covering at all times and prior to entering campus entrances.
Additional Safety Measures for Fall 2020
We continue to refine comprehensive strategies for infection control ahead of the fall semester. We are addressing every facet of campus life, including instruction, housing, and events. We will share guidelines in the coming weeks, but below is a preview of what you can expect in August:
  • Physical distancing strategies will be implemented on our campuses, with heightened safety measures in learning and meeting spaces;
  • All spaces (including classrooms and common areas) will observe adjusted maximum capacities, in accordance with the 6-foot requirement. We will not convene large lecture classes;
  • Learning spaces will be cleaned after every use, with EPA-approved materials;
  • Every academic building will utilize designated entry and exit doors to minimize individuals passing in proximity between classes.
We are developing comprehensive plans to respond proactively to any individual who is symptomatic, tests positive for COVID-19, or has been in close contact with someone who tests positive. This plan includes aggressive testing, contact tracing, and isolation/quarantine measures. Our students, faculty, and staff will require flexibility to determine their individual interests concerning their health and safety in the fall. We must adapt to evolving circumstances and support community members by offering options for how we teach, learn, work, and live.

I often hear people refer to LMU as “our university” and even “my university.” That small iteration brings with it profound implications: Each of us cares for LMU as if it were our own. And, in the way we care for each other, respect each other, and enact cura personalis in each encounter, the university, indeed, belongs to each of us. Thank you for your care and your impactful contributions.

With appreciation,
Tom

Thomas Poon, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President and Provost

Message from the Provost to Students: Update on the Fall Semester

May 27, 2020 

Dear Lions:

Thank you for your patience and flexibility as we carefully prepare for our fall semester. We miss you and are eager for you to continue your academic journey on the bluff. We remain committed to returning to our beautiful campus in fall, in alignment with forthcoming guidelines from public health authorities. We also recognize that our approaches to in-person teaching and campus life during the 2020-21 academic year will be more varied than in pre-pandemic times. As we always do, our community will continue to adapt to provide the best possible range of teaching and learning and co-curricular activities, and our world-class faculty will draw upon their teaching prowess, scholarship, expertise, and creativity to deliver our academic excellence. Our spacious campus and reliable Southern California climate will afford us unique opportunities for community and academic engagement.

Guiding Principles
As we address the challenges of this unprecedented moment our guiding principles anchor our approach:
  • LMU’s Catholic, Jesuit, and Marymount mission and values charge us to educate with purpose. We benefit from the diversity of perspectives that drive our creativity and ambitions;
  • We will continue to align our evidence-based decisions with recommendations from public health authorities as the health and wellness of our community is our top priority;
  • Our students, faculty, and staff will require flexibility to determine their individual needs concerning their health and safety in the fall. We will adapt to developing circumstances and support community members by offering options for how we teach, learn, work, and live to ensure that our students retain access to the personalized educational excellence on which we pride ourselves;
  • We will be responsible stewards of our resources as we navigate the financial impacts of the pandemic and economic downturn, always with an eye toward academic excellence and education of the whole person.
Academic Calendar
After receiving updated guidance from the U.S. Department of Education and in continued consultation with, and advice from a multitude of campus leaders, we share the following schedule for fall 2020:
  • Our fall semester will be on a 16-week calendar, with instruction beginning on Aug. 31, and concluding on Dec. 11. Finals will take place Dec. 14-18.
  • To avoid an increase in infections due to travel during the Thanksgiving break, the last day of in-person instruction will be Nov. 24. Students will not return to campus following Thanksgiving. Instead, instruction from Nov. 30 to the end of the semester, as well as final examinations, will only be conducted remotely.
  • Classes within time blocks will be staggered to allow for physical distancing. We are working to minimize the impact on student schedules and the Registrar will send a further communication in late June.
Key fall semester dates are:
  • Aug. 31, 2020: First Day of Instruction
  • Sept. 7, 2020: Labor Day, no classes
  • Nov. 24, 2020: Last Day of In-Person Instruction
  • Nov. 30, 2020: Remote Instruction Begins
  • Dec. 11, 2020: Last Day of Instruction
  • Dec. 14-18, 2020: Finals
For spring 2021, we are planning a 16-week semester beginning Jan. 11. Spring break will coincide with our Easter break and start Tuesday, March 30, with instruction resuming Tuesday, April 6. Monday, March 29, will be designated as a remote learning day to allow for maximum travel flexibility.

Fall Semester Outlook
We continue to refine comprehensive strategies for infection control ahead of the fall semester; and are addressing every facet of campus life, including instruction, housing, dining, and events. In all instances, we will follow directives from public health authorities. We strive to deliver a joyous and fulfilling term while keeping you healthy and safe.

We will continue to communicate with you during the summer weeks, but here is a preview of what you can expect to see on campus this August:
  • All spaces (including classrooms and common areas) will observe adjusted maximum capacities, in accordance with the 6-foot distancing requirement. We will not convene large lecture classes;
  • Learning spaces will be cleaned regularly with EPA-approved materials;
  • To the extent that it is possible, academic buildings will have designated entry and exit doors;
  • We will have a comprehensive plan to proactively respond to any individual who is symptomatic, tests positive for COVID-19, or has been in close contact with someone who tests positive;
  • At the start of the semester, we expect public health authorities to limit attendance at athletics events and performances subject to physical distancing requirements;
  • We anticipate further guidance specific to higher education institutions, with measures tailored to our unique environment.
CARES Relief Update
On May 21, the U.S. Department of Education released new guidance regarding student eligibility for CARES Act funding. LMU Financial Aid is revising the university’s plan to begin disbursement of funds based on this new information. More details will be announced soon.

Staying Informed and Engaged
We welcome your questions and comments related to pandemic response and recovery. We will continue communicating regularly through our website, social channels, email, LMU This Week, and university leaders. We will share another update by June 30. In the meantime, please note the following resources:
  • LMU’s Coronavirus Website continues to be the hub for latest updates;
  • The #LMUTogether campaign showcases stories that inspire our community with creativity and resilience;
  • Student Affairs’ Virtual Student Experience provides Lions with ways to stay engaged and connected with the LMU community. 
This global pandemic has turned our lives upside down, but it will not prevent us from forming compassionate individuals who are prepared to lead lives of meaning and purpose — people, like yourselves, who change, shape, and create the world you want to live in. Together, we will rise from this crisis more connected, more impactful, and stronger than ever.

With gratitude,

Thomas Poon, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President and Provost

Fall 2020 Update for Students

June 5, 2020 

Dear Students,

Over the last few weeks, President Snyder and Provost Poon have been communicating LMU’s plans for the fall 2020 semester. We hope you have had an opportunity to read the prior updates and watch President Snyder’s video. We are excited to welcome you back to the bluff and continue to be committed to our Ignatian traditions of academic excellence and care of the whole person.

Your health and wellness remain our number one priority and continue to inform our planning and preparations for the fall. We know that this semester will be different, and that we all have to be ready to adapt to new and changing circumstances. We are committed to providing students with a learning environment that follows best practices for social distancing and sanitation as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As we prepare the campus and the fall course schedule to be in alignment with government regulations, our goal is to minimize any disruption to your fall schedule; however, there may be some changes to course timing or course modality that may include the following:

  • We will be offering our courses through three different modalities for maximum flexibility and to protect the health of our community. These will include in-person classes, hybrid classes, which is a blend of in person and remote sessions, and online classes.
  • We are committed to meeting students where they are, either on campus or virtually. Students who are not able to attend classes in person due to health concerns, travel restriction or delays in receiving a visa, will be able to participate in their courses remotely. If it is your intention to study remotely for the fall semester please notify the Office of the Registrar at registrar@lmu.edu.
  • Classes will be spread out across the day and start times will be staggered to allow for optimal physical distancing. Although course times will need to be modified somewhat, most students will experience little disruption to their current course schedule as courses will basically be sequenced in the same manner. We will reach out to any student who needs to make an adjustment to ensure that all students stay on track towards their degree.

Modifications to the fall course schedule will continue over the next several weeks and may change occasionally while it is being optimized. We will communicate with you once the course schedule has been finalized. We ask that you hold off on any actions or decisions until then. When the schedule is finalized we will communicate the process for reviewing and adjusting your fall schedule prior to the start of classes. Students will have the opportunity to contact their Dean’s office with any questions. We appreciate your patience and understanding as we work to assure that all LMU students have a successful fall semester.

We are working on building enriching and engaging classes that are optimized for the mode of delivery and that allow students to interact and build community. Our faculty are preparing over the summer to ensure that our classes have the same signature elements, and we look forward to building impactful experiences with students. Please reference the FAQs provided on the Office of the Registrar’s website and direct any questions to registrar@lmu.edu or your dean’s office.

With warm regards,

Maureen P. Weatherall, Ed.D.
Vice Provost
Enrollment Management

Kathleen Weaver, Ph.D.
Associate Provost for Research, Professional Development, and Online Learning

 

Fall 2020 Reopening Updates for Faculty and Staff

July 14, 2020

Dear LMU Community, 

Thank you for your understanding, flexibility, and resilience as we make progress toward reopening. In our many recent updates, we shared expectations and guiding principles; today, I preview how the fall semester will operate in the current pandemic era, where a surge in COVID-19 cases is occurring in Los Angeles with record numbers in California and across the country. Our students, parents, and community members are finalizing impactful decisions amid uncertainty, and I recognize your need for more information. This fall will be unlike any other semester: Our undergraduate courses will be principally and primarily conducted remotely; for many students, courses will be offered exclusively online. While interest in on-campus student housing remains extremely high, we regret that we can only accommodate about one-third of our typical capacity to comply with forthcoming public health restrictions. 

Our decisions and timelines continue to depend on data and guidelines not fully available to us in a context where some factors remain unknown. Public health guidelines for higher education are slow in coming and anticipated safety protocols are changing rapidly: California and Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (LACDPH) will restrict our on-campus activities. Yesterday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced statewide reclosures that roll back California’s reopening progress. Also, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the nation’s second-largest school district with over 600,000 students, announced they were moving online this fall. Los Angeles is considering reimplementing stay-at-home orders based on increased virus spread risks. I am confident that, amidst these changes, we can provide our signature Catholic, Jesuit, and Marymount education while substantially reducing in-person instruction and lowering on-campus housing density. The well-being of our students, faculty, and staff is our top priority.

Keeping You Informed and Engaged

As we continue adjusting to the ever-changing circumstances, our Reopening Website will be the hub for everything about LMU’s fall 2020 reopening. Also, I will host a series of town halls for faculty, staff, students, and parents starting on July 29, 2020 (schedule here). We will also keep you informed about schedules, advisories, and more as appropriate.

I highlight the following helpful resources that we will be updating frequently:

  • Scheduling (the fall semester calendar remains unchanged from our June 6 fall update);
  • Protocols for Reopening (guidelines on distancing, reporting, and other health best practices);
  • Tools to Keep Learning, Teaching, and Working;
  • Categorized FAQs (Student, Faculty/Staff, Campus Visitors, COVID-19) that cover fall instruction and campus life; if we have not answered your question in our comprehensive FAQs, please submit the question here.

Delivering Our Signature Education

The teaching and educational experience that LMU delivers is exceptional, admitting no low-cost substitute, whether in person or remotely. An LMU education is unmatched: Our faculty, student development professionals, and campus ministers continue to keep our students as their highest priority. Our esteemed, internationally renowned faculty continue to provide personalized instruction, advising, and mentoring. Your scholarship, research, and creativity—and your tireless efforts to provide a rich, academically excellent, intellectually rigorous curriculum online and in person—are why an LMU education is in higher demand than ever. Despite the pandemic’s disruption, our students have not lost momentum, and they continue making progress in their degree programs. Student evaluations of our online courses have been on par with evaluations of face-to-face courses, and faculty report that student academic engagement and performance in their online courses have been outstanding. We will continue to provide student-centered support services, leadership opportunities, activities, spiritual guidance, and career and professional development mentorship and opportunities that reflect the transformative cura personalis for which LMU is known.

Financial Assistance for Our Students and Families

Over the past several months, students and parents have approached us asking for additional help amid challenging financial circumstances. We have read their letters, we have seen their social media posts, and we hear them. Recognizing the increased financial pressures on our students and their families during this COVID-19 pandemic, we are taking new and unprecedented steps to respond to their requests and lower their overall cost of attendance. This year, no undergraduate student will pay the university’s standard rates for tuition and fees.

  • 85 percent of our undergraduate students are receiving financial aid this year. LMU is providing $133 million in total student grants and scholarships this year, $90.6 million of which goes to undergraduates to lower out-of-pocket costs. This does not include funding from government or external sources.
  • In April, the university approved an additional $10 million in need-based financial aid to support our students and families for 2020-21 (summer, fall, and spring) tuition, providing supplementary relief in recognition of the challenges some students are facing during the pandemic.
  • As of this week, we are providing an additional $6 million in LMU COVID Tuition Relief Grants ($1000 for undergraduate students enrolled full time in the fall) to all undergraduate students enrolled full time in the fall. With the support of our trustees, the university approved this aid to further lower costs of an LMU education. Financial Aid will automatically award these grants to undergraduates, which we will apply to student accounts in the next week.
  • LMU will continue to credit/refund/adjust for fees (including housing, meal plans, recreation, parking, etc.) for students who are unable to use these on-campus services.

The $16 million of additional undergraduate financial assistance outlined above represents a nearly 20 percent increase in aid to undergraduates this fall, over and above the $90.6 million we provide in LMU-funded undergraduate scholarships and grants. The increased assistance we are providing is only possible because of the extraordinary measures we are taking to remain cost effective: The funding comes from budget reductions, employee furloughs, executive pay cuts, and other sacrifices made by faculty, staff, and administrators working around-the-clock to support our students through this pandemic. 

We understand and honor the difficult choices and burdens associated with affording an LMU education. LMU, as a private, nonprofit university, relies on tuition to fund salaries and contractual obligations that support our students. We have made these additional commitments because we prioritize our students and our families. The steps we are taking are not common at many colleges and universities, but we are not a common university. We are devoted to our mission; we are unified in our commitment to educating our students; and we are #LMUTogether.

Academics and Technology

LMU’s immediate academic response in the spring to the Stay-at-Home order required faculty to shift urgently to fully-online instruction. Since then, our faculty have been working tirelessly to design meaningful online courses and experiences that challenge our students and support students’ academic ambitions through rich learning environments. We are committed to delivering exemplary, engaging, and student-centered experiences regardless of instructional mode—face-to-face, online, or in hybrid combinations. This summer, LMU faculty and staff have participated in training for a variety of tools and skills for excellent online course development offered via a partnership between the Center for Teaching Excellence and Information Technology Services. Faculty members across all schools and colleges are collaborating and sharing resources with each other to ensure our students’ intellectual fulfilment and academic success.

Students

  • Instruction will be primarily, and for most students exclusively, delivered remotely. 
  • We will focus our in-person and hybrid experiences in the following types of courses: studios and performance-based courses; seminars; research and labs; graduate film production courses; and selected independent studies courses.  
  • Students can view their schedules via PROWL. Registration will reopen for students with course schedule conflicts on July 20 and all students on July 21. Students are encouraged to work with their academic advisers for further guidance.
  • We recommend a minimum technology standard for PCs and Macs to ensure an optimal online learning experience. To reference these standards or to seek support for any technology issues or questions, please access our Keep Learning webpage
  • Students will continue to benefit by LMU’s phenomenal curricular and co-curricular support and development offerings, including the William H. Hannon Library, the Academic Resource Center, Student Affairs, and Career and Professional Development, among many others.

Faculty

  • Most faculty members have already opted for remote instruction. As we prepare to further reduce in-person classes, we are investing additional new resources into the remote instruction experience to assist faculty with the transition, including two new instructional designers.
  • Health and safety are paramount: We strongly recommend faculty to move as many courses as possible to remote formats. I have asked our academic leaders and deans to work closely with our faculty. 
  • The Educational Technology team will consult individually with faculty to ensure that their teaching environments are enabled with adequate technology.

Technology

  • The eFaculty Certification program, offered through a partnership from the CTE and the Instructional Technology team, guides LMU faculty through the process of reimagining their courses for hybrid or online delivery. Since March, more than 550 faculty members have either completed or signed up for the eFaculty Certification program. Participating faculty learn about best practices for online education, including strategies around instructor presence, student engagement, building online learning communities, and assessment. This training also provides faculty with the opportunity to develop proficiency using LMU-supported educational technologies including Brightspace, Zoom, FlipGrid, Voicethread, and a host of other tools aimed at addressing discipline-specific learning and content creation. For classes that require specialized software, LMU has made its best effort to provide that software via the LMU Virtual Lab or through free at-home licensing via the software vendor. 
  • ITS is working diligently with departments to ensure all bi-modal and online courses are delivered optimally. 

Student Housing

Our options for fall on-campus housing are limited because of public health restrictions that require that we reduce on-campus housing capacity from what we anticipated. Traditional residence halls will be closed, and we will only assign one student per bedroom in our remaining suite-style and apartment residences. We strongly recommend students to reconsider housing plans and to remain home this fall.   

For our newly entering first-year and transfer students, we regret that we cannot provide them with the residential experience that we normally offer. We recommend that they attend their fall courses remotely so that they are on track in their degree programs. While studying remotely this fall, they will have the opportunity to participate in the rich online co-curricular activities we are planning for them. We are optimistic that circumstances will improve so that we can resume in-person instruction and on-campus housing in the spring semester—with delight! 

Our new reduced, low-density occupancy plan will prioritize the following students who acknowledged the updated license agreement by July 6, 2020: 

  • Undergraduate students who are unable to effectively study from an off-campus location;
  • Undergraduate students requiring on-campus disability accommodations;
  • Students who are housing-insecure;
  • International students who are currently in the U.S. without off-campus housing options;
  • Undergraduate students enrolled in in-person and hybrid experiences without off-campus options.

If students believe they meet one or more of the aforementioned criteria or are experiencing extenuating circumstances that warrant special consideration for limited on-campus housing, they must log into the Student Housing portal and complete a supplemental application by 5 p.m. on July 22. The supplemental application will open tomorrow, July 15 at 9 a.m. We will review and approve these requests on a case-by-case basis. More information about student housing for fall 2020 can be found on the Student Housing website; students can expect an update from Student Housing soon. 

In the meantime, all housing and meal plan charges that were applied to students’ accounts for fall 2020 will be reversed. Only those students who receive an assignment through the supplemental application process will be billed for student housing and meal plans once fall assignments are finalized. If a student does not receive an assignment through the supplemental application process, they will be placed on a waitlist for student housing and assigned when space becomes available. This waitlist will carry over through spring 2021.

If a student does not wish to remain on the waitlist, they should log into the Student Housing portal to cancel their housing application and License Agreement by 5 p.m. on August 7, 2020, to receive a refund of their deposit. Off Campus Student Life is available to provide recommendations and resources for students seeking to live off-campus.

We are working as quickly as possible to adjust to these new limitations and reassign housing accordingly. We will confirm all housing assignments by July 31, 2020.  

International Students

Our international students are essential members of our LMU family. We are thrilled to report that, earlier this afternoon, the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced that they would rescind their divisive policy. We benefit from the diversity of perspectives that drive our creativity and ambitions, and our international students are a rich source of the LMU experience. The Office for International Students and Scholars will share further information as appropriate. We will continue working with our Congressional delegation, colleague institutions, and our advocacy organizations, including AJCU and ACE, to ensure that our international students’ education is not interrupted.  

Athletics

We are currently reviewing the status of fall and winter sports with public health authorities, the West Coast Conference, and the NCAA. Some conferences have announced their plans to cancel practices and schedules; we anticipate an update in the next couple of weeks. In the meantime, a few of our teams are engaging in permissible strength and conditioning activities that observe strict LACDPH safety measures.

Excellent Infection Behavior Control

Whether on campus or off, we will live by the motto: Excellent Infectious Behavior Control (EIBC). 

  • Each of us plays an instrumental role to ensure that our entire community remains healthy. We will protect ourselves and we will protect each other. We will hold each other accountable for EIBC.
  • We will adapt to new ways of teaching, learning, studying, working, and living because the LMU experience is worth the effort.  
  • Effective immediately, all students, faculty, staff, contractors, and visitors who are approved for campus access must submit their Lion Health Check daily before arriving to campus or departing from their on-campus residence. You can access the Lion Health Check via the LMU Rave Guardian mobile app (download instructions here) or online. Please use the app ONLY if you are already identified as essential and coming to campus. Please refrain from testing out the app as all screening inquiries need to be manually reviewed and addressed. 

Our students are at the heart of everything we do and we support their success and intellectual, creative, and spiritual growth, be we on campus or online. I am indebted to each of you for your patience, creativity, and engagement as we continue to adapt to these changes and overcome these once-in-a-lifetime challenges while remaining dedicated to the distinctive LMU educational experience that fosters our Lion pride.  

We will keep you informed with further updates. 

With gratitude,

Thomas Poon, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President and Provost

Fall 2020 Reopening Updates for Students

July 14, 2020 

Dear LMU Community, 

Thank you for your understanding, flexibility, and resilience as we make progress toward reopening. In our many recent updates, we shared expectations and guiding principles; today, I preview how the fall semester will operate in the current pandemic era, where a surge in COVID-19 cases is occurring in Los Angeles with record numbers in California and across the country. Our students, parents, and community members are finalizing impactful decisions amid uncertainty, and I recognize your need for more information. This fall will be unlike any other semester: Our undergraduate courses will be principally and primarily conducted remotely; for many students, courses will be offered exclusively online. While interest in on-campus student housing remains extremely high, we regret that we can only accommodate about one-third of our typical capacity to comply with forthcoming public health restrictions. 

Our decisions and timelines continue to depend on data and guidelines not fully available to us in a context where some factors remain unknown. Public health guidelines for higher education are slow in coming and anticipated safety protocols are changing rapidly: California and Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (LACDPH) will restrict our on-campus activities. Yesterday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced statewide reclosures that roll back California’s reopening progress. Also, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the nation’s second-largest school district with over 600,000 students, announced they were moving online this fall. Los Angeles is considering reimplementing stay-at-home orders based on increased virus spread risks. I am confident that, amidst these changes, we can provide our signature Catholic, Jesuit, and Marymount education while substantially reducing in-person instruction and lowering on-campus housing density. The well-being of our students, faculty, and staff is our top priority.

Keeping You Informed and Engaged

As we continue adjusting to the ever-changing circumstances, our Reopening Website will be the hub for everything about LMU’s fall 2020 reopening. Also, I will host a series of town halls for faculty, staff, students, and parents starting on July 29, 2020 (schedule here). We will also keep you informed about schedules, advisories, and more as appropriate.

I highlight the following helpful resources that we will be updating frequently:

  • Scheduling (the fall semester calendar remains unchanged from our June 6 fall update);
  • Protocols for Reopening (guidelines on distancing, reporting, and other health best practices);
  • Tools to Keep Learning, Teaching, and Working;
  • Categorized FAQs (Student, Faculty/Staff, Campus Visitors, COVID-19) that cover fall instruction and campus life; if we have not answered your question in our comprehensive FAQs, please submit the question here.

Delivering Our Signature Education

The teaching and educational experience that LMU delivers is exceptional, admitting no low-cost substitute, whether in person or remotely. An LMU education is unmatched: Our faculty, student development professionals, and campus ministers continue to keep our students as their highest priority. Our esteemed, internationally renowned faculty continue to provide personalized instruction, advising, and mentoring. Their scholarship, research, and creativity—and their tireless efforts to provide a rich, academically excellent, intellectually rigorous curriculum online and in person—are why an LMU education is in higher demand than ever. Despite the pandemic’s disruption, our students have not lost momentum, and they continue making progress in their degree programs. Student evaluations of our online courses have been on par with evaluations of face-to-face courses, and faculty report that student academic engagement and performance in their online courses have been outstanding. We will continue to provide student-centered support services, leadership opportunities, activities, spiritual guidance, and career and professional development mentorship and opportunities that reflect the transformative cura personalis for which LMU is known.

Financial Assistance for Our Students and Families

Over the past several months, students and parents have approached us asking for additional help amid challenging financial circumstances. We have read your letters, we have seen your social media posts, and we hear you. Recognizing the increased financial pressures on our students and their families during this COVID-19 pandemic, we are taking new and unprecedented steps to respond to your requests and lower your overall cost of attendance. This year, no undergraduate student will pay the university’s standard rates for tuition and fees.

  • 85 percent of our undergraduate students are receiving financial aid this year. LMU is providing $133 million in total student grants and scholarships this year, $90.6 million of which goes to undergraduates to lower out-of-pocket costs. This does not include funding from government or external sources.
  • In April, the university approved an additional $10 million in need-based financial aid to support our students and families for 2020-21 (summer, fall, and spring) tuition, providing supplementary relief in recognition of the challenges some students are facing during the pandemic.
  • As of this week, we are providing an additional $6 million in LMU COVID Tuition Relief Grants ($1000 for undergraduate students enrolled full time in the fall). With the support of our trustees, the university approved this aid to further lower costs of an LMU education. Financial Aid will automatically award these grants to undergraduates, which we will apply to student accounts in the next week.
  • LMU will continue to credit/refund/adjust for fees (including housing, meal plans, recreation, parking, etc.) for students who are unable to use these on-campus services. 

The $16 million of additional undergraduate financial assistance outlined above represents a nearly 20 percent increase in aid to undergraduates this fall, over and above the $90.6 million we provide in LMU-funded undergraduate scholarships and grants. The increased assistance we are providing is only possible because of the extraordinary measures we are taking to remain cost effective: The funding comes from budget reductions, employee furloughs, executive pay cuts, and other sacrifices made by faculty, staff, and administrators working around-the-clock to support our students through this pandemic. 

We understand and honor the difficult choices and burdens associated with affording an LMU education. LMU, as a private, nonprofit university, relies on tuition to fund salaries and contractual obligations that support our students. We have made these additional commitments because we prioritize you—our students and our families. The steps we are taking are not common at many colleges and universities, but we are not a common university. We are devoted to our mission; we are unified in our commitment to educating our students; and we are #LMUTogether.

Academics and Technology

LMU’s immediate academic response in the spring to the Stay-at-Home order required faculty to shift urgently to fully-online instruction. Since then, our faculty have been working tirelessly to design meaningful online courses and experiences that challenge our students and support students’ academic ambitions through rich learning environments. We are committed to delivering exemplary, engaging, and student-centered experiences regardless of instructional mode—face-to-face, online, or in hybrid combinations. This summer, LMU faculty and staff have participated in training for a variety of tools and skills for excellent online course development offered via a partnership between the Center for Teaching Excellence and Information Technology Services. Faculty members across all schools and colleges are collaborating and sharing resources with each other to ensure our students’ intellectual fulfilment and academic success.

  • Instruction will be primarily, and for most students exclusively, delivered remotely. 
  • We will focus our in-person and hybrid experiences in the following types of courses: studios and performance-based courses; seminars; research and labs; and selected independent studies courses.  
  • You can view your schedules via PROWL. Registration will reopen for students with course schedule conflicts on July 20 and all students on July 21. Please work with your academic advisers for further guidance.
  • We recommend a minimum technology standard for PCs and Macs to ensure an optimal online learning experience. To reference these standards or to seek support for any of your technology issues or questions, please access our Keep Learning webpage. 
  • You will continue to benefit by LMU’s phenomenal curricular and co-curricular support and development offerings, including the William H. Hannon Library, the Academic Resource Center, Student Affairs, and Career and Professional Development, among many others.

Student Housing

Our options for fall on-campus housing are limited because of public health restrictions that require that we reduce on-campus housing capacity from what we anticipated. Traditional residence halls will be closed, and we will only assign one student per bedroom in our remaining suite-style and apartment residences. We strongly recommend students to reconsider housing plans and to remain home this fall.   

For our newly entering first-year and transfer students, we regret that we cannot provide you with the residential experience that we normally offer. We recommend that you attend your fall courses remotely so that you are on track in your degree programs. While studying remotely this fall, you will have the opportunity to participate in the rich online co-curricular activities we are planning for you and your first-year classmates. We are optimistic that circumstances will improve so that we can resume in-person instruction and on-campus housing in the spring semester—with delight! 

Our new reduced, low-density occupancy plan will prioritize the following students who acknowledged the updated license agreement by July 6, 2020:

  • Undergraduate students who are unable to effectively study from an off-campus location;
  • Undergraduate students requiring on-campus disability accommodations;
  • Students who are housing-insecure;
  • International students who are currently in the U.S. without off-campus housing options;
  • Undergraduate students enrolled in in-person and hybrid experiences without off-campus options.

If you believe you meet one or more of the aforementioned criteria or are experiencing extenuating circumstances that warrant special consideration for limited on-campus housing, you must log into the Student Housing portal and complete a supplemental application by 5 p.m. on July 22. The supplemental application will open tomorrow, July 15 at 9 a.m. We will review and approve these requests on a case-by-case basis. More information about student housing for fall 2020 can be found on the Student Housing website; you can expect an update from Student Housing soon.  

In the meantime, all housing and meal plan charges that were applied to your account for fall 2020 will be reversed. Only those students who receive an assignment through the supplemental application process will be billed for student housing and meal plans once fall assignments are finalized. If you do not receive an assignment through the supplemental application process, you will be placed on a waitlist for student housing and assigned when space becomes available. This waitlist will carry over through spring 2021.

If you do not wish to remain on the waitlist, please log into the Student Housing portal to cancel your housing application and License Agreement by 5 p.m. on August 7, 2020, to receive a refund of your deposit. Off Campus Student Life is available to provide recommendations and resources for students seeking to live off-campus.

We are working as quickly as possible to adjust to these new limitations and reassign housing accordingly. We will confirm all housing assignments by July 31, 2020.

International Students

Our international students are essential members of our LMU family. We are thrilled to report that, earlier this afternoon, the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced that they would rescind their divisive policy. We benefit from the diversity of perspectives that drive our creativity and ambitions, and our international students are a rich source of the LMU experience. The Office for International Students and Scholars will share further information as appropriate. We will continue working with our Congressional delegation, colleague institutions, and our advocacy organizations, including AJCU and ACE, to ensure that our international students’ education is not interrupted.

Athletics

We are currently reviewing the status of fall and winter sports with public health authorities, the West Coast Conference, and the NCAA. Some conferences have announced their plans to cancel practices and schedules; we anticipate an update in the next couple of weeks. In the meantime, a few of our teams are engaging in permissible strength and conditioning activities that observe strict LACDPH safety measures. 

Excellent Infection Behavior Control

Whether on campus or off, we will live by the motto: Excellent Infectious Behavior Control (EIBC). 

  • Each of us plays an instrumental role to ensure that our entire community remains healthy. We will protect ourselves and we will protect each other. We will hold each other accountable for EIBC.
  • We will adapt to new ways of teaching, learning, studying, working, and living because the LMU experience is worth the effort.  
  • Effective immediately, all students, faculty, staff, contractors, and visitors who are approved for campus access must submit their Lion Health Check daily before arriving to campus or departing from their on-campus residence. You can access the Lion Health Check via the LMU Rave Guardian mobile app. Please use the app ONLY if you are already identified as essential and coming to campus. Please refrain from testing out the app as all screening inquiries need to be manually reviewed and addressed. 

Our students are at the heart of everything we do and we support your success and intellectual, creative, and spiritual growth, be we on campus or online. I am indebted to each of you for your patience, creativity, and engagement as we continue to adapt to these changes and overcome these once-in-a-lifetime challenges while remaining dedicated to the distinctive LMU educational experience that fosters our Lion pride. So much of who we become in life is shaped by where we go to school. I am honored that you chose LMU. 

We will keep you informed with further updates.  

With gratitude,

Thomas Poon, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President and Provost 

Fall Reopening Updates for Graduate Students

July 17, 2020

Dear LMU Graduate Students,

Earlier this week I shared with our undergraduate students, parents, faculty, and staff the university’s decision that our undergraduate courses will be principally and primarily conducted remotely for the fall semester; for many undergraduates, their courses will be offered exclusively online. I am also aware that many of you have already been informed by your specific school/college that the university has made the same decision about our graduate-level courses, which will follow this same principally online model. Because specific parameters may differ somewhat by academic program and degree sought, additional program-specific information will be forthcoming from your school/college dean, department chairs, and program directors.

The well-being of our graduate and undergraduate students, faculty, and staff is our top priority. Regardless of our modality and approach, we look forward to welcoming you back for the fall semester. Our decisions and timelines regarding student and faculty access to LMU’s campuses during the fall semester continue to depend on data and guidelines not fully available to us in a context where some factors remain unknown. Public health guidelines for higher education continue to be slow in coming and anticipated safety protocols are changing rapidly: California and Los Angeles County Department of Public Health (LACDPH) will restrict our on-campus activities. On Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced statewide reclosures that roll back California’s reopening progress, with further announcements forthcoming. Also, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the nation’s second-largest school district with over 700,000 students, announced they were moving online this fall. Los Angeles is considering reimplementing stay-at-home orders based on increased virus spread risks. I am confident that, amidst these changes, we will provide our signature graduate and professional education while substantially reducing in-person instruction and lowering on-campus density.

Keeping You Informed and Engaged
We know that you are managing multiple responsibilities—as working professionals, as parents/caretakers, and other roles while pursuing your graduate degrees. As we continue adjusting to these ever-changing circumstances together, our Reopening Website is our hub for news and updates about LMU’s fall 2020 reopening. We will also keep you informed about schedules, advisories, and more as appropriate. Information about graduate assistantships, research assistantships, and teaching fellowships is forthcoming.

I highlight the following helpful resources that will be updated frequently:
  • Protocols for Reopening (guidelines on distancing, reporting, and other health best practices);
  • Tools to Keep LearningTeaching, and Working;
  • Categorized FAQs (Student, Faculty/Staff, Campus Visitors, COVID-19) that cover fall instruction and campus life; if we have not answered your question in our comprehensive FAQs, please submit the question here.
Delivering Our Signature Education
During these challenging times, the teaching and educational experience that LMU delivers continues to be exceptional, whether in person or remotely. An LMU education is unmatched: Our faculty, student development professionals, and campus ministers continue to make our graduate and undergraduate students their highest priority. Our esteemed, internationally renowned faculty continue to provide personalized instruction, advising, and mentoring. Their scholarship, research, and creativity — and their tireless efforts to provide a rich, academically excellent, intellectually rigorous curriculum online and in person — are why an LMU education is in higher demand than ever. Despite the pandemic’s disruption, our students have not lost momentum, and they continue making progress in their degree programs. We will continue to provide student-centered support services, leadership opportunities, activities, spiritual guidance, and career and professional development mentorship and opportunities that reflect the transformative cura personalis for which LMU is known.

Academics and Technology
LMU’s immediate academic response to the Stay-at-Home order in March required faculty to shift urgently to fully-online instruction. Since then, our faculty have been working tirelessly to design meaningful online courses and experiences that challenge our graduate students and support your academic and professional ambitions through rich learning environments. We are committed to delivering exemplary, engaging, and student-centered experiences regardless of instructional mode—face-to-face, online, or in hybrid combinations. This summer, LMU faculty and staff have participated in training for a variety of tools and skills for excellent online course development offered via a partnership between the Center for Teaching Excellence and Information Technology Services. Faculty members across all schools and colleges are collaborating and sharing resources with each other to ensure our students’ intellectual fulfillment and academic success.

For the fall semester, please note:
  • Instruction will be primarily, and for nearly all graduate students exclusively, delivered remotely;
  • We will focus our in-person and hybrid experiences in the following types of courses: studio- and performance-based courses; film production courses; and selected independent studies courses;
  • We recommend a minimum technology standard for PCs and Macs to ensure an optimal online learning experience. To reference these standards or to seek support for any of your technology issues or questions, please access our Keep Learning webpage;
  • You will continue to benefit by LMU’s phenomenal academic support and professional development services, with specific offerings tailored to graduate students’ needs, including the William H. Hannon Library, the Academic Resource CenterStudent Affairs, and Career and Professional Development, among many others.
International Students
Our international students are essential members of our LMU family. We were thrilled to hear this week’s news that the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced that they would rescind their divisive policy. We benefit from the diversity of perspectives that drive our creativity and ambitions, and our international students are a rich source of the LMU experience. The Office for International Students and Scholars will share further information as appropriate. We will continue working with our Congressional delegation, colleague institutions, and our advocacy organizations, including AJCU and ACE, to ensure that our international students’ education is not interrupted.

Excellent Infection Behavior Control
Whether on campus or off, we will live by the motto: Excellent Infectious Behavior Control (EIBC).
  • Each of us plays an instrumental role to ensure that our entire community remains healthy. We will protect ourselves and we will protect each other. We will hold each other accountable for EIBC.
  • We will adapt to new ways of teaching, learning, studying, working, and living because LMU is resilient and consistent in its commitment to excellence.
  • Effective immediately, all graduate and undergraduate students, faculty, staff, contractors, and visitors who are approved for campus access must submit their Lion Health Check daily before arriving to campus or departing from their on-campus residence. You can access the Lion Health Check via the LMU Rave Guardian mobile app (download instructions here) or online. Please use the app ONLY if you are already identified as essential and coming to campus. Please refrain from testing out the app as all screening inquiries need to be manually reviewed and addressed.

Our graduate and undergraduate students are at the heart of everything we do, and we support your success and intellectual, creative, and spiritual growth. I am indebted to each of you for your patience, creativity, and engagement as we continue to adapt to these changes and overcome these once-in-a-lifetime challenges while remaining dedicated to the distinctive LMU educational experience that fosters our Lion pride. So much of who we become in life is shaped by where we study. I am honored that you chose and continue to choose LMU.

We will keep you informed with further updates, and, as noted above, you will also soon receive information from your school/college dean, department chairs, and program directors.

With gratitude,

Thomas Poon, Ph.D.
Executive Vice President and Provost

 

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