Category Archives: Diversity

Scholars Mount Large-Scale Effort to Study Affirmative Action’s Effects—Bad and Good

The Chronicle: Scholars Mount Large-Scale Effort to Study Affirmative Action’s Effects—Bad and Good

Campaign to Limit Affirmative Action in Missouri Wins a Legal Victory

A national consortium of about 30 professors and graduate students has been quietly gathering student data from colleges and law schools to examine the effect of affirmative-action policies on their intended beneficiaries.

Despite Surging Endowments, High-Ranking Universities and Colleges Show Disappointing Results in Enrolling Low-Income Students

Journal of Blacks in Higher Education: Despite Surging Endowments, High-Ranking Universities and Colleges Show Disappointing Results in Enrolling Low-Income Students

Despite Surging Endowments, High-Ranking Universities and Colleges Show Disappointing Results in Enrolling Low-Income Students

In recent years, the endowments of the nation’s most prestigious colleges and universities have soared. Many of these institutions are committing substantial funds in efforts to enroll more students from low-income families. Results have been disappointing over the long and short terms. The percentages of low-income students at almost all of the highly selective colleges and universities have declined.

When Identity Trumps Diversity

Inside Higher Ed: When Identity Trumps Diversity

When a professor asked for an exemption to a Calvin College policy so she could join a black church — while remaining a tenure-track faculty member — the board said no.

Tracking Bias or Guilt by Association?

Inside Higher Ed: Tracking Bias or Guilt by Association?

If a professor is a member of a church that holds anti-gay views, and isn’t forthright about those views, does that make the professor’s vote against the tenure bid of a gay professor suspect?

That is one of the questions explored in an unusual lawsuit against the University of Michigan — filed nearly three years ago but thus far bogged down in preliminary motions. State courts have twice rejected requests by Michigan to have the case dismissed and a third request was scheduled to be heard this week, but postponed. The professor, Peter Hammer, won a majority of votes of the faculty of the law school in his case. But the 18-12 margin was two shy of the two-thirds requirement to win tenure, so he lost his job, and now is a professor of law at Wayne State University. He says he was the first male faculty member rejected by the faculty for tenure in 40 years.

Florida: More blacks succeed at FSU

Tampa Tribune: More blacks succeed at FSU

Growing up on the impoverished streets of Miami’s Liberty City neighborhood, Pedro Gassant never considered himself a contender for college. His mother worked for a dry-cleaning business; his father cleaned houses. They didn’t go to college, and neither did Gassant’s five older brothers.

Black Male Initiative Conference Yields Best Practices

Diverse Magazine: Black Male Initiative Conference Yields Best Practices

Five years after the University System of Georgia started an initiative to boost enrollment of Black males, officials are seeing results, but they also realize more needs to be done.

Colleges find new ways to retain diversity

Detroit Free Press: Colleges find new ways to retain diversity

Nearly a year after Proposal 2 went into effect, the fight continues over what the statewide ban on affirmative action means for higher education.

A court battle simmers. College applications are being mined for information on who is applying. Private groups, which were not affected by the ban, are tailoring more scholarships to boost diversity.

Stanford launches Faculty Development Initiative to recruit best scholars of ethnicity and race

Stanford launches Faculty Development Initiative to recruit best scholars of ethnicity and race

Stanford University has launched a five-year effort to appoint the best young scholars in the nation whose research focuses on the study of ethnicity and race.

U. of Delaware Abandons Sessions on Diversity

The Chronicle: U. of Delaware Abandons Sessions on Diversity

Effort to teach tolerance in dormitories attacked as ‘thought reform’
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The University of Delaware spent years refining its residence-life education program. One week of public criticism unraveled it.

Late last month, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a free-speech group, accused the university of promoting specific views on race, sexuality, and morality in a series of discussions held in dormitories. The program was designed to build understanding among diverse students, but some participants complained that it told them how to think and pried into their beliefs with questions like “When did you discover your sexual identity?”

Kentucky: A pledge for more college diversity

Lexington Herald-Leader: A pledge for more college diversity
KENTUCKY JOINS SCHOOLS VOWING TO CLOSE GAPS

In a coordinated stab at one of higher education’s most pressing problems, the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education and some of the nation’s largest university systems pledged yesterday to cut in half the achievement gaps for minority and low-income students on their campuses by 2015.

Wisconsin: Minority professors ‘rare’ in sciences

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Minority professors ‘rare’ in sciences

Women and minorities are significantly underrepresented as professors in science and engineering departments at the top research universities across the country, including the University of Wisconsin-Madison and UW-Milwaukee.

At a West Virginia University, New Protections for Pagans

The New York Times: At a West Virginia University, New Protections for Pagans

At Marshall University, pagan students are now allowed to miss classes to observe religious holidays or festivals.

A new policy makes the university in Huntington, W.Va., with an enrollment of about 14,000, possibly the only college in the country to protect pagans formally from being penalized for missing classes, although many institutions have policies intended to protect students of every faith.

University to students: ‘All whites are racist’

WorldNetDaily: University to students: ‘All whites are racist’

A mandatory University of Delaware program requires residence hall students to acknowledge that “all whites are racist” and offers them “treatment” for any incorrect attitudes regarding class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality they might hold upon entering the school, according to a civil rights group.

A Haven for Minority Scholars

Inside Higher Ed: A Haven for Minority Scholars

The number of black, Hispanic and American Indian recipients of Ph.D.’s has been edging higher in recent years, but members of those groups are still significantly underrepresented in the proportion of all doctorates earned.

So it’s hardly surprising that at most of the academic meetings that a black graduate student like La Tonya M. Green goes to, such as those in her discipline of urban studies and planning, she feels like “a speck in a room,” as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology doctoral student put it at the Compact for Faculty Diversity’s Institute on Teaching and Mentoring in Washington last weekend.

Minority Hiring Still Lags in College Sports, Report Says, but New Standards Could Help

The Chronicle: Minority Hiring Still Lags in College Sports, Report Says, but New Standards Could Help

The proportion of minority coaches of big-time college sports programs continues to be tiny, a report says, but its author sees hope for change.

Justice blames Yale affirmative action for his early job problems

The Boston Globe: Justice blames Yale affirmative action for his early job problems

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has a 15-cent price tag stuck to his Yale law degree, blaming the school’s affirmative action policies in the 1970s for his difficulty finding a job after he graduated.

Some of his black classmates say Thomas needs to get over his grudge because Yale opened the door to extraordinary opportunities.

Opposition Mounts to David Horowitz’s Islamo-Fascism

page0_5.pngNational Project in Defense of Dissent and Critical Thinking in Academia:
Opposition Mounts to David Horowitz’s Islamo-Fascism

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Reggie Dylan: (626) 319-1730
Email: criticalxthinking@yahoo.com

Website: www.defendcriticalthinking.org

Opposition Mounts to David Horowitz’s Islamo-Fascism
Awareness Week.

There has been increasing opposition by students,
scholars and organizations around the country to David
Horowitz’s Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week (IFAW) during
October 22-26. The National Project to Defend Dissent
and Critical Thinking in Academia
(www.defendcriticalthinking.org) is reporting on
student and faculty plans at UC Berkeley, UC Davis,
UCLA, USC, DePaul University, Emory University, Boise
State, the University of Washington, Columbia
University, and elsewhere. More activities are being
announced every day.

A newly formed Chicago Committee to Resist
‘Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week’ is calling on
“students, faculty, and all people of conscience to
come to DePaul to defeat Horowitz’ reactionary
offensive.” They call on people to rally an hour
before Robert Spencer’s speech at DePaul on Monday,
Oct. 22nd, and have plans to respond to every event
organized by the DePaul Conservative Alliance.

Professors Peter McLaren, Juan Gomez Quinones and Alan
Jones, and Larry Everest, author of Oil, Power, and
Empire will take part in a forum at UCLA on Tuesday at
1 p.m.; and Everest will join UC Berkeley Ethnic
Studies graduate student/acting instructor Roberto
Hernandez for a panel discussion, entitled “Who Are
the Real Fascists?,” Tuesday evening on the Berkeley
campus.

At UC Davis, the Muslim Student Association is
responding to IFAW with “Academic Freedom Week,” with
a series of forums and film showings. At Tulane,
students are circulating a petition in opposition to
Ann Coulter’s talk there, saying that it is “an event
encouraging violence and hate towards members of our
community.” Students at Emory, which is one of the
schools hosting David Horowitz, began events in
opposition the week before IFAW.Many organizations have released statements condemning
IFAW, including The Committee for an Open Discussion
of Zionism, The US Campaign to End the Israeli
Occupation, Jewish Voice for Peace, Muslim Students
Association, Council on American Islamic Relations and
the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. World
Can’t Wait-Drive Out the Bush Regime has said that
IFAW aims to “create an atmosphere at these colleges
where it is okay to be openly racist and reactionary.”

A variety of scholars and others have spoken out in
opposition to IFAW and its proponents. Gary Leupp of
Tufts University has said called IFAW a “hate
campaign” which “is more than an affront to Muslims.
It is an insult to everybody’s intelligence.” Noted
linguist and political writer Noam Chomsky recently
said of Horowitz and his allies, “It’s pointless to
debate such lunacy, but it’s wrong to disregard it.”
He added that, “in a free society, there should be
zero tolerance for institutions responsible for the
indoctrination of the young, or for the rest of the
attacks on democracy under the cynical pretext of
defending democracy.” Chomksy made these comments at a
recent forum on Academic Freedom held at the
University of Chicago where nearly 1,000 people
listened to and engaged scholars Tony Judt, John
Mearsheimer, Tariq Ali and others.

Critics are particularly concerned about Horowitz’s
plan of staging sit-ins at Women’s Studies
Departments. This will be done, he says, in order to
raise awareness of the oppression of women under
Islamic fundamentalism and protest the “silence” of
feminists on the subject. Reggie Dylan notes that,
“Women’s Studies scholars have actually been at the
forefront of supporting the rights of women (and gays
and lesbians) under Islamic fundamentalism. And
without Women’s Studies departments and the feminist
struggles which gave rise to them, people like
Horowitz would not even be giving hypocritical
lip-service to the oppression of women anywhere.”
Sunsara Taylor of World Can’t Wait-Drive Out the Bush
Regime says that given Horowitz’s track record, he “is
a man who has no right to speak on behalf of women.”

Some of the speakers for IFAW, such as Ann Coulter,
Rick Santorum and Horowitz himself, are well known.
Many of the others are not broadly known, though some
are politically well-connected and influential. Robert
Spenser, the director of Jihad Watch, has led seminars
on Islam and jihad for United States Central Command,
United States Army Command and General Staff College,
a Department of Homeland Security task force, and
branches of the Joint Terrorism Task Force. Michael
Ledeen, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute, was said by the Washinton Post to be Rove’s
main international affairs adviser. Daniel Pipes,
whose Campus Watch encourages students to report on
the “anti-Israel” bias of professors, recently joined
Rudolph Giuliani’s presidential campaign as an
advisor. Nonie Darwish is an Egyptian convert to
Christian fundamentalism who has said, “Islam is
cruel, anti-women, anti-religious freedom and
anti-personal freedom in general.”

One of the groups most concerned about IFAW has been
the Muslim Students Association, along with other
Muslim and Arab organizations. Horowitz has called the
MSA a front for Islamic terrorists and insisted they
sign his petition or be branded as an enemy of the US.
Muslim students have expressed concern that women
wearing head scarves could be physically attacked by
students motivated by Horowitz. One student worried
that IFAW represented the beginning of a “Krystalnacht
for Muslims,” a reference to the pogrom of Jews by the
Nazis and their brownshirts in 1933.

Besides their specific concerns about IFAW, these
groups have pointed to Horowitz’s website
frontpagemagazine.com as a regular source of
anti-Islam material. One article called for “a
complete stop to Muslim immigration, and … creative
ways to deport all Muslim non-citizens” in order to
create “an environment where the practice of Islam is
made not easy but difficult.” Another says an
“average” devout Muslim is a “soulless robot … [who]
hates all non-Moslems, a “beast” with only “the body
of a human being.” Other Horowitz allies have said
“Osama bin Laden is a very good Muslim — a model one,
in fact, and one of the most devout in the 1400 years
of Islam,” and “Muslims have no allegiance to any
country. Their only allegiance is to Islam.”

IFAW comes in the wake of a number of high profile
cases in which professors have been forced from their
university. In June, tenured Ethnic Studies Professor
Ward Churchill at the University of Colorado-Boulder
was fired – many felt that he had been subjected to an
intense investigation solely because of his political
views. In May, prominent DePaul University political
scientist Norman Finkelstein was denied tenure, with
many DePaul faculty and others seeing it as an attempt
to punish one side of a controversial debate.

Together, these two cases were seen by many in
academia as part of a much broader attack on academic
freedom, critical thinking and dissent. Reggie Dylan
notes that “Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week is a
dangerous offensive intended to deepen the already
serious chill in academia by bringing together an
aggressive social base and unleashing it on what
Horowitz calls the “tenured left.” He adds, “IFAW
cannot be allowed to go down unchallenged. It needs to
be thoroughly exposed, repudiated and politically
defeated.”

Audio Interview: A Gay President Speaks Out

The Chronicle: Audio Interview: A Gay President Speaks Out

Charles R. Middleton, president of Roosevelt University and one of 11 openly gay college presidents in the United States, talks about discrimination in the presidency.

Are You Ready for ‘Islamo-Fascism Week’?

Inside Higher Ed: Are You Ready for ‘Islamo-Fascism Week’?

“Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” is still three weeks away, but the event and a similar campaign from Young America’s Foundation are already setting off campus controversies and debates about tolerance and free speech.

US university urged to lift ban on Tutu

AP: US university urged to lift ban on Tutu

Faculty members, students and others have urged the University of St. Thomas to reconsider its decision opposing a campus visit by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu.