No bombs were found at Plympton Elementary School — located approximately two miles from campus — after a series of robocall threats forced the school to evacuate on Thursday, according to a Feb. 2 email from Senior Vice President for Students and Enrollment Andrew Flagel.

According to the Waltham Police blotter, the threat was reported at approximately 11:12 a.m. on Thursday.

In the email, which went out to the University community, Flagel wrote that Plympton was one of several public schools in Massachusetts and New Hampshire to receive similar robotically generated call threats last week.

He added that no bombs were found in the elementary school, and students returned to class shortly after.

“We have received no such calls at Brandeis,” Flagel noted, attaching a Jan. 18 email from Director of Public Safety Ed Callahan regarding telephoned bomb threats received at Jewish community centers around the country.

Jewish institutions in at least 17 states were targeted with threats in January, according to statistics cited by the Boston Globe in a Jan. 18 article.

“[We] want to … reassure you that our campus police continues to work closely with area law enforcement in response to these ongoing issues,” Flagel wrote.

This is not the first time that Waltham public schools have been the target of bomb threats.

In January 2016, Fitzgerald Elementary School was forced to evacuate when a caller stated that they were going to detonate a bomb in the school, according to a Jan. 19, 2016 Waltham Patch article.

—Abby Patkin