College Students are getting Smarter, Professors Beware!

This is an AP story.


Students Sue Over Academic Freedom

At the University of North Carolina, three incoming freshmen sue over a reading assignment they say offends their Christian beliefs.


In Colorado and Indiana, a national conservative group publicizes student allegations of left-wing bias by professors. Faculty get hate mail and are pictured in mock "wanted" posters; at least one college says a teacher received a death threat.


And at Columbia University in New York, a documentary film alleging that teachers intimidate students who support Israel draws the attention of administrators.

The three episodes differ in important ways, but all touch on an issue of growing prominence on college campuses.

Traditionally, clashes over academic freedom have pitted politicians or administrators against instructors who wanted to express their opinions and teach as they saw fit. But increasingly, it is students who are invoking academic freedom, claiming biased professors are violating their right to a classroom free from indoctrination.

In many ways, the trend echoes past campus conflicts – but turns them around. At one time it was liberal campus activists who cited the importance of "diversity" in pressing their agendas for curriculum change. Now conservatives have adopted much of the same language in calling for a greater openness to their viewpoints.

Similarly, academic freedom guidelines have traditionally been cited to protect left-leaning students from punishment for disagreeing with teachers about such issues as American neutrality before World War II and U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Now those same guidelines are being invoked by conservative students who support the war in Iraq.

To many professors, there's a new and deeply troubling aspect to this latest chapter in the debate over academic freedom: students trying to dictate what they don't want to be taught.

"Even the most contentious or disaffected of students in the '60s or early '70s never really pressed this kind of issue," said Robert O'Neil, former president of the University of Virginia and now director of the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression.

Those behind the trend call it an antidote to the overwhelming liberal dominance of university faculties. But many educators, while agreeing that students should never feel bullied, worry that they just want to avoid exposure to ideas that challenge their core beliefs – an essential part of education.

Some also fear teachers will shy away from sensitive topics, or fend off criticism by "balancing" their syllabuses with opposing viewpoints, even if they represent inferior scholarship.

"Faculty retrench. They are less willing to discuss contemporary problems and I think everyone loses out," said Joe Losco, a professor of political science at Ball State University in Indiana who has supported two colleagues targeted for alleged bias. "It puts a chill in the air."

Conservatives say a chill is in order.

A recent study by Santa Clara University researcher Daniel Klein estimated that among social science and humanities faculty members nationwide, Democrats outnumber Republicans by at least 7-to-1; in some fields it's as high as 30-to-1. And in the last election, the two employers whose workers contributed the most to Sen. John Kerry's presidential campaign were the University of California system and Harvard University.

Many teachers insist personal politics don't affect teaching. But in a recent survey of students at 50 top schools by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, a group that has argued there is too little intellectual diversity on campuses, 49 percent reported that at least some professors frequently commented on politics in class even if it was outside the subject matter.

Thirty-one percent said they felt there were some courses in which they needed to agree with a professor's political or social views to get a good grade.

Leading the movement is the group Students for Academic Freedom, with chapters on 135 campuses and close ties to David Horowitz, a one-time liberal campus activist turned conservative agitator. The group posts student complaints on its Web site about alleged episodes of grading bias and unbalanced, anti-American propaganda by professors -- often in classes, such as literature, in which it's off-topic.

Instructors "need to make students aware of the spectrum of scholarly opinion," Horowitz said. "You can't get a good education if you're only getting half the story."

Conservatives claim they are discouraged from expressing their views in class, and are even blackballed from graduate school slots and jobs.

"I feel like (faculty) are so disconnected from students that they do these things and they can just get away with them," said Kris Wampler, who recently publicly identified himself as one of the students who sued the University of North Carolina. Now a junior, he objected when all incoming students were assigned to read a book about the Quran before they got to campus.

"A lot of students feel like they're being discriminated against," he said.

So far, his and other efforts are having mixed results. At UNC, the students lost their legal case, but the university no longer uses the word "required" in describing the reading program for incoming students (the plaintiffs' main objection).

In Colorado, conservatives withdrew a legislative proposal for an "academic bill of rights" backed by Horowitz, but only after state universities agreed to adopt its principles.

At Ball State, the school's provost sided with Professor George Wolfe after a student published complaints about Wolfe's peace studies course, but the episode has attracted local attention. Horowitz and backers of the academic bill of rights plan to introduce it in the Indiana legislature -- as well as in up to 20 other states.

At Columbia, anguished debate followed the screening of a film by an advocacy group called The David Project that alleges some faculty violate students' rights by using the classroom as a platform for anti-Israeli political propaganda (one Israeli student claims a professor taunted him by asking, "How many Palestinians did you kill?"). Administrators responded this month by setting up a new committee to investigate students complaints.

In the wider debate, both sides cite the guidelines on academic freedom first set out in 1915 by the American Association of University Professors.

The objecting students emphasize the portion calling on teachers to "set forth justly ... the divergent opinions of other investigators." But many teachers note the guidelines also say instructors need not "hide (their) own opinions under a mountain of equivocal verbiage," and that their job is teaching students "to think for themselves."

Horowitz believes the AAUP, which opposes his bill of rights, and liberals in general are now the establishment and have abandoned their commitment to real diversity and student rights.

But critics say Horowitz is pushing a political agenda, not an academic one.

"It's often phrased in the language of academic freedom. That's what's so strange about it," said Ellen Schrecker, a Yeshiva University historian who has written about academic freedom during the McCarthy area. "What they're saying is, 'We want people to reflect our point of view."'

Horowitz's critics also insist his campaign is getting more attention than it deserves, riling conservative bloggers but attracting little alarm from most students. They insist even most liberal professors give fair grades to conservative students who work hard and support their arguments.

Often, the facts of particular cases are disputed. At Ball State, senior Brett Mock published a detailed account accusing Wolfe of anti-Americanism in a peace studies class and of refusing to tolerate the view that the U.S. invasion of Iraq might have been justified. In a telephone interview, Wolfe vigorously disputed Mock's allegations. He provided copies of a letter of support from other students in the class, and from the provost saying she had found nothing wrong with the course.

Horowitz, who has also criticized Ball State's program, had little sympathy when asked if Wolfe deserved to get hate e-mails from strangers.

"These people are such sissies," he said. "I get hate mail every single day. What can I do about it? It's called the Internet."

13,311 views 35 replies
Reply #1 Top
Not smarter-- just products of a different environment that have become vocal ::shrug::
They have their right to challenge what they feel is offensive, but sometimes, the point of college is not to have the students memorize data, but to prepare them for what they decide to do /go after they graduate. People need to understand and deal with the fact that not everyone will agree with them on everything. For example, I think that it's a good idea to have the students grasp concepts in the Quran-- if it is suggested reading for the course (something that will increase your knowledge on topics that relate to the outcome of your grade) then I believe that the student should at least skim it to get familiar with it. Unless there was the type of harassment used by that professor as the other prof who was abusing their authority to intimidate pro-Israel students, it is unneccessarily resistant of the students to refuse to learn the curriculum that the teacher has chosen.

As far as teachers stating their opinions, I fully support it as long as they allow for civil discourse and encourage the students to challenge their own assumptions as long as it is respectful. Please understand that I have no respect for teachers who grade poorly out of personal hostility, no matter what topics were addressed.

There is a difference when a teacher says "This [recent political decision] is absurd and anyone who supports obviously has no idea what they're involved in because they are too busy trying to ignore those who are actually affected by this decision" (me paraphrasing an actual prof), and "I don't agree with this [political decision] because, from my experience, these things are not as simple as they appear" (another professor who was addressing the same topic the same week at the same school). I can tell you're itching to know what they were concerned about, but it's not the point where they stand, it's how well they open the class up for discussion or close the discussion before it's started.
Reply #2 Top

Reply #1 By: fox_in_the_snow - 12/24/2004 4:45:32 AM
Not smarter-- just products of a different environment that have become vocal ::shrug::
They have their right to challenge what they feel is offensive, but sometimes, the point of college is not to have the students memorize data, but to prepare them for what they decide to do /go after they graduate. People need to understand and deal with the fact that not everyone will agree with them on everything. For example, I think that it's a good idea to have the students grasp concepts in the Quran-- if it is suggested reading for the course (something that will increase your knowledge on topics that relate to the outcome of your grade) then I believe that the student should at least skim it to get familiar with it. Unless there was the type of harassment used by that professor as the other prof who was abusing their authority to intimidate pro-Israel students, it is unneccessarily resistant of the students to refuse to learn the curriculum that the teacher has chosen.

As far as teachers stating their opinions, I fully support it as long as they allow for civil discourse and encourage the students to challenge their own assumptions as long as it is respectful. Please understand that I have no respect for teachers who grade poorly out of personal hostility, no matter what topics were addressed.

There is a difference when a teacher says "This [recent political decision] is absurd and anyone who supports obviously has no idea what they're involved in because they are too busy trying to ignore those who are actually affected by this decision" (me paraphrasing an actual prof), and "I don't agree with this [political decision] because, from my experience, these things are not as simple as they appear" (another professor who was addressing the same topic the same week at the same school). I can tell you're itching to know what they were concerned about, but it's not the point where they stand, it's how well they open the class up for discussion or close the discussion before it's started


That's the whole problem in a nutshell. They aren't opening it up for discussion. Having watched and listened to a son, a neice and a nephew go through 4 years. I have seen it first hand. Basically if you don't agree with their philosiphy you are ignorant and usually get marked accordingly. My son figured it out early. He agreed with whatever was said for 4 yrs. After graduation he told his professors just where the bear shit in the buckwheat! My neice and nephew have not fared quite so well I'm afraid.
Reply #3 Top

WOW!

Since when did the AP become a Right wing outift?  I wonder how the libs are going to stpin this!

I know, just one kook!  Let them be so myopic!  Sanity is finally prevailing and the left's free wheeling days of brainwashing are coming to an end.  I hope we dont swing to the other side, but it is good to see Students challenging incompetant clowns that dont know anything bu academia.

Has anyone ever read the Foundation Trilogy, by Isaac Asimov?  remember the legate from the Empire who was 'doing research'?  Seems that is what is going on now.

Reply #4 Top
I think both sides have some very valid points on this one. Yes, some professors push their beliefs when they shouldn't, but at the same time... suing over having to read the Quran? Come on, that's just ridiculous. I think we need to have our mental boundaries pushed, especially in college. They're not saying you have to believe it, not that you have to discard your beliefs... just that you should be aware of it and try to understand it. If this lawsuit gets through, you'll se a wave of lawsuits from students saying they don't want to learn anything... they just want the diploma without any of that icky learning stuff.

I don't think it's possible for professors to keep their politics to themselves... I had conservative professors who were as bad as the liberal ones at that... the only difference is they're fewer in number.
Reply #5 Top

I don't think it's possible for professors to keep their politics to themselves... I had conservative professors who were as bad as the liberal ones at that... the only difference is they're fewer in number.


What College?  Mine, in an admittely conservative state, did not have any conservative professors.  To my chagrin, I bit my tongue and listened, all the while seeing how stupid they really were.

Reply #6 Top


Reply #3 By: Dr. Guy - 12/24/2004 1:16:25 PM
WOW!
Since when did the AP become a Right wing outift? I wonder how the libs are going to stpin this!


This social liberal has already stated her kooky view on the issue.
Reply #7 Top

This social liberal has already stated her kooky view on the issue.


Too bad.  I guess they are not learning yet.

Reply #8 Top
"At the University of North Carolina, three incoming freshmen sue over a reading assignment they say offends their Christian beliefs."

In this case I am going to have to side with the school. You get what you pay for(well considering this is not a public college.). Not only that but it is not required that they accept anything in the book. Having the judicial system interefere is only stooping down to a Liberal Level.

Though I think it is quite sickening the amount of liberal percentage in colleges I think it is the right of a non-public college to give out whatever education it wants.

I am also quite pleased with the way the Conservative Students are dealing with it. By protesting and producing media to advance their cause they might be able to conquer the political racism in colleges without having to go through the Liberal Technique(Judicial Intervention).
Reply #9 Top
Is the school publically funded in any way? If so, then to allow them to promote any religious beliefs, even in the guise of education, is intolerable. Hell, people get pissy over the fact that a teacher mentions that the the Declaration of Independence mentions a "Creator", but forcing students to read the Quran is all right?
Reply #10 Top
Is the school publically funded in any way? If so, then to allow them to promote any religious beliefs, even in the guise of education, is intolerable.
Please! Teachers (secondary or college) can assign readings from The Bible, and I, for one, do so.

Students would often have a good case for objecting to liberal bias in education, for example when instructors use the platform of a survey literature course to teach a course in feminism. There are many such examples.

However, the example of students not wanting the read the Quran is just about the worst possible place for conservatives to begin. Claiming the right to earn a college degree while deliberately remaining ignorant of the text of a major religion is absurd.

When someone makes the statement that "some other point of view needs to be heard" I start with the assumption that they at least deserve a fair hearing. However, this is a case of people saying "I know nothing about this, but I know so much about this that I know it is not worth hearing." We will always have people of this ilk, but I would hate to think that we are required to certify to their being educated.

Reply #11 Top
Please! Teachers (secondary or college) can assign readings from The Bible, and I, for one, do so.


Really? They can actually have their students read religious texts in public schools?
Reply #12 Top

Reply #10 By: Don Bemont - 12/25/2004 7:04:16 PM
Is the school publically funded in any way? If so, then to allow them to promote any religious beliefs, even in the guise of education, is intolerable.
Please! Teachers (secondary or college) can assign readings from The Bible, and I, for one, do so.


Oh REALLY? You must have a very understanding school district.
And if you really do what you say, then you my friend are in a very small minority.
Reply #13 Top
Is the Bible required reading? If you're going to use the arguement of knowledge you cannot discriminate vs one and not the other. I see the conversative attempts to be the same tactics once implied by liberals. Obviously it worked once or there would be no liberal machine to struggle against, so..fight fire with fire. That's how I see the situation.


No and that is where you are wrong. Conservatices dont promote any agenda. They just dont brain wash either. We watn them to think. Something these clowns cant understand.
Reply #14 Top
Conservatices dont promote any agenda.


whoa, back up the train. no freaking way.
Reply #15 Top
As far as assigning readings from the bible at colleges (I don't know about secondary education), it's not illegal...at least in Pennsylvania. Temple University, a state school in Philadelphia, requires all of its students to take two courses called Intellectual Heritage 51 and Intellectual Heritage 52.

"The first course of a required two-course sequence covers key readings in the western and other intellectual traditions. Readings in Intellectual Heritage 1 extend from the Bible and ancient Greece through the Renaissance, covering topics as varied as literature, religion, political thought, and the history of science. The second course extends from John Locke through the modern era, and again including the history of science, political science, and literature."

This is wonderful class--although it assigns readings from the bible and the Quran (there are many topics covered not mentioned in the description), in no way does it require that students look at it from a personal religious angle. Instead, it picks it apart in order to understand how it has influenced everything.

Reply #16 Top
I'm sorry, I thought college was supposed to be about expanding your mind and all that great stuff. Refusing to read an assignment just because it doesn't jive with your beliefs if just being closed-minded. Nobody's forcing you to ACCEPT what you read-- just to read it. You can form your own opinions (and probably argue them in class), but only AFTER you've actually READ the material. Otherwise, you're just arguing against something you've never even examined-- which doesn't make any sense. And I do think assigning the Quran isn't a bad idea-- Muslims are very misunderstood in our culture, and I can see how young minds could benefit by exploring a culture different from their own. College is about new experiences and expanding your mind, and preparing you for life afterwards-- where you WILL be affected by and surrounded by people of different cultures. Might as well get used to it now.
Lazy college students shouldn't use their religions as excuses not to do work.
Reply #17 Top

Reply #17 By: MusiKitty - 12/30/2004 2:42:42 AM
I'm sorry, I thought college was supposed to be about expanding your mind and all that great stuff. Refusing to read an assignment just because it doesn't jive with your beliefs if just being closed-minded. Nobody's forcing you to ACCEPT what you read-- just to read it. You can form your own opinions (and probably argue them in class), but only AFTER you've actually READ the material. Otherwise, you're just arguing against something you've never even examined-- which doesn't make any sense. And I do think assigning the Quran isn't a bad idea-- Muslims are very misunderstood in our culture, and I can see how young minds could benefit by exploring a culture different from their own. College is about new experiences and expanding your mind, and preparing you for life afterwards-- where you WILL be affected by and surrounded by people of different cultures. Might as well get used to it now.
Lazy college students shouldn't use their religions as excuses not to do work.


So if they have family fighting in Iraq, and or that have died during the fighting you would still make them read the Quran? I don't think that would be considered kosher (grin).
What this post is about is that *finally* someone has the guts to say NO we're not going to eat this spoon-fed pablum anymore.
Reply #18 Top
How can you possibly object to reading the Qur'an? It's not like it's particularly heavy going. Sure it's flowery, but that just means there are some great pickup lines in there if you can think laterally. And if you don't read it, you can't really claim to be an expert or even educated on the Middle East or any branch of the Muslim faith. It's like refusing to read the Ramayana when studying India, or rejecting Shakespeare and wanting to study English Literature. I think everyone should read the major religious texts, if just to get those great quotable quotes to spout off when challenged. The only defence against bothersome fanatics is knowledge (or some sort of weapon, but I don't think the kiddies should be taught that). And by reading the Qur'an, you'll get a lot of quotables.
Reply #19 Top
Reply #19 By: cactoblasta - 12/30/2004 4:46:42 AM
How can you possibly object to reading the Qur'an? It's not like it's particularly heavy going. Sure it's flowery, but that just means there are some great pickup lines in there if you can think laterally. And if you don't read it, you can't really claim to be an expert or even educated on the Middle East or any branch of the Muslim faith


Do any of these children claim to be experts on the middle east? And how can you miss read my original post? I'm not objecting to anything, they are. And that is what I applaud. They didn't wish to read it and had the courage to say "no" to their professors, requardless of the outcome. Trust me, there will be ramifications about this from the school! And just between you and me....personally I will not read it nor do I see any need to.
Reply #20 Top
They didn't wish to read it and had the courage to say "no" to their professors, requardless of the outcome.


What in God's name are they doing in college then? The most essential part of a post-school education is expanding your philosophical and mental mind through encountering new ideas and new ways of doing things. If they don't want to have to be challenged by the ideas in a particular book, they can either go to a less responsible university/college or take their chances that the exams won't cover it. As for readings set before term begins... don't they realise that anything covered there will be covered again in the actual courses? It seems more like bloodymindedness than anything else that makes them protest this.

Although of course if they are successful, I shall definitely use their arguments to avoid reading Huntington again, or the schlock of many of the more dull writers. Whether I'm better educated because of it is doubtable.
Reply #21 Top
Really? They can actually have their students read religious texts in public schools?
Of course we can, and we do. What we cannot do is tell anyone that one religion or another is the "correct" one.
College or not, the government should not be preaching religion, which it is doing when employees of a public college funded by the government is forcing their students to read religious texts.
I agree with the first half of your statement but disagree with the second half. How can you hope to explain the history of civilization and put today's world in perspective if students do not read the beliefs of the various religions?

Much of the material I use I gather myself, but, ironically, most of the religious texts come right out of our mainstream high school textbook. We spend quite a bit of time contrasting the worldviews of Kafka and Nietzsche to that of scripture.

By the way, we have a student club that has met regularly for years to discuss scripture and pray around the flagpole before school.
Reply #22 Top
College or not, the government should not be preaching religion, which it is doing when employees of a public college funded by the government is forcing their students to read religious texts.
Reply #23 Top
drmiler--- Yes, I *would* (if I were a professor) force a student whose family member was killed in Iraq to read the Quran, if he/she were in my class. Why wouldn't I? Not all Muslims are terrorists/insurgents, and I believe that any student could benefit by exploring another culture. Why should he/she be exempt from required reading? If I, as a professor, think that my students' minds could be expanded and their understanding of the world be increased by reading the Quran, then I WOULD require it. Just because some terrorists and fundamentalists have used the Quran to justify their killings doesn't mean the Quran itself is a bad book. Think of all the terrible things the Bible has been used to justify (witch trials, the Crusades, slavery). Does that mean the Bible is a bad book? If I thought my students could learn about historical culture, etc. by reading the Bible, then I would assign it, whether my students were Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, or atheist. Reading a book that a culture considers holy doesn't mean you're automatically going to believe it. It's just gaining a better understanding of the culture and religion that DOES accept the book as fact. Sorry, that was a very long and drawn out explanation.
Reply #24 Top

Reply #24 By: MusiKitty - 12/30/2004 11:41:56 PM
drmiler--- Yes, I *would* (if I were a professor) force a student whose family member was killed in Iraq to read the Quran


And that my dear would more than likely end up with you in court being sued. I myself would consider that most inconsiderate. As would more than likely the jury.
Reply #25 Top
So now we need to take each student on a case-by-case basis and create a custom reading list for each of them based on their family history, religious beliefs and personal philosophies? I'm sorry, that doesn't fly. One of the first lessons everyone needs to learn in college is that you are not a special case anymore, that the harsh world outside of your parents house doesn't give a rats ass who you are or what your family does and will not treat you with kid gloves to avoid hurting your feelings or sensibilities.

Saying someone should be excused from a reading because they had a family member killed in Iraq is like excusing someone from a History of the 20th Century class during the WWII part if their grandfather served and died. Personal tragedy should not be an excuse to remain ignorant. I'm sorry, my ancestors were persecuted by the Roman Catholic church... I have to be excused from any history reading that involves the church because I feel it offensive.

You go to a University or college to learn, to learn things you would not normally be able to or would not be motivated to on your own. I think including the Quran as required reading is a good idea, especially in current times. Walk down a street in any American town or city, randomly ask them some basic Bible trivia, and you'll find most Americans have a basic grasp of it. Now, do the same with Quran trivia... I bet you'll get much different results. Most people are completely and utterly ignorant of the book, and the religion, yet they're ready to condemn it for being evil. It would help things out a lot if more people at least were aware and understood the book and religion on an intellectual level.

On the argument that it's a state school and shouldn't push any religion... then I guess you think any reference to "God" in any pledge or historical document should be removed... afterall it is a religious reference and we can't be making those as a state institution. You don't get it both ways.

Heaven forbid anyone would have to learn anything that doesn't fit neatly into their little image of the world.