Drastic classroom temperatures continue to make learning difficult for students and teachers at City College of San Francisco.
The issue is front of mind for many in the campus community as another winter approaches. Until recently, multiple CCSF buildings lacked heat and functional boilers. But even as some repairs have been made, some classrooms are sweltering hot while others continue to lack heat at all, students and a faculty member told KQED.
“These heating issues are really unacceptable and non-conducive to learning,” said City College Board of Trustees President Alan Wong. “I have a lot of anger when I hear about students who have to use hand warmers in class. We need to push and continue to make progress on this, or we risk losing students.”
In some classrooms, students wear heavy jackets and use hand warmers when small space heaters provided by the college haven’t been enough to bring temperatures above even 60 degrees.
“I always feel very cold. I wear a big coat and other people in the class feel the same way. Our professor brought his own space heater to our class,” said Yoanna Li, whose biology class at the Ocean campus doesn’t have heating.
Others are having a polar opposite experience. Nicole Barens, who teaches English as a Second Language classes at the college’s Mission campus, said her classroom thermostat has been stuck at unusually high temperatures for weeks, causing her and her students to sweat through classes.
“I am not kidding when I say that all of us are sweating to the point where I have to bring a towel or bandanna to class. And I’m not the only teacher dealing with that. There are a few of us, and it’s been exhausting,” Barens said. “Not to mention the fact that COVID is an issue and students aren’t masking, and so there’s no air circulation.”
The Mission campus had no heating for much of last winter, Mission Local first reported. But after students and faculty raised the issue last winter, the administration agreed to repair a broken boiler on campus. Now that it’s been repaired, a new issue has emerged where some classrooms can’t turn down the heat, Barens said.
