Discover all of the most crucial pandemic education news on Educating N.J., a special resource guide produced for teachers, parents and students. As schools reopen throughout N.J., we need to know what is and isnt working. Inform us about it here.Three hundred trainees were quarantining at New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark after high levels of COVID-19 were found in the sewage of among the dorms, authorities said.Every student at Cypress Hall was quarantined Wednesday night after the test outcomes were launched that evening, NJIT Chief Strategy Officer Matthew Golden informed NJ Advance Media.The students can leave campus, but the university will suspend their swipe access to centers till they evaluate unfavorable, Golden said.They are all doing virtual knowing while under quarantine and were all checked for COVID-19 Thursday early morning with the outcomes expected by Monday at the most current, he said.None of the trainees have reported any symptoms of the virus.The school tests 400 trainees at random for COVID-19 every week, and prior to the favorable sample in the sewage, just three individuals had actually evaluated favorable, Golden said.He added that the waste water testing will be one of the universitys “best tools” for catching the virus early prior to it spreads.He stated it can be used as an “early warning system” for asymptomatic individuals as the virus can show up in their urine or feces, which winds up in waste water.The university has professionals in water testing on school including Professor Lucia Rodriguez-Freire. She informed NJ Spotlight News that she suggested the sewage test for COVID-19 and stated that is happening at numerous other universities in other states in addition to the Netherlands, Finland and Spain.”The great thing about it is, we do not need to evaluate people,” Rodriguez-Freire informed the news outlet. “We can check the entire community, and see if something is going on.”Golden said he thought that NJIT was the only university in New Jersey doing waste water testing.Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting NJ.com with a voluntary subscription.Chris Sheldon may be reached at csheldon@njadvancemedia.com.