Academic Capital Flows: U. of Chicago Plans $200-Million Milton Friedman Institute

The Chronicle: Academic Capital Flows: U. of Chicago Plans $200-Million Milton Friedman Institute

A decade ago, officials in Mongolia reportedly considered building a statue in honor of Milton Friedman, who was one of the 20th century’s most influential proponents of laissez-faire economics.

Today the University of Chicago announced its own monument to Mr. Friedman, who died in 2006 at the age of 94. The university plans to invest $200-million in a research center to be known as the Milton Friedman Institute.

Ohio: Former UT administrator vows to fight for her job

WTOL.com: Former UT administrator vows to fight for her job

Crystal Dixon Dixon promised to fight the university, saying she had hired many gays and lesbians at UT and that the column was a personal matter, a “divine mandate” to speak out against homosexuality.

TOLEDO — The big news isn’t that conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh has commented on former University of Toledo Human Resources Administrator Crystal Dixon’s termination.

So we won’t start there, though we will say that he compared the firing to something Joseph Stalin might have done. (See video, Crystal Dixon fights back, attached.)

Loyalty Oaths Threaten Faculty Rights

AAUP: Loyalty Oaths Threaten Faculty Rights

State oaths of allegiance requiring all state employees, including teachers in public colleges and universities, to affirm their support of a state’s constitution as condition of government employment are decades-old, but two recent cases on different California State University campuses underscore how the execution of the requirement can damage faculty rights.

The California oath requires persons employed by a California university (other than foreign nationals) to swear to “support and defend” the constitutions of the United States and of California, to take the obligation “without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion,” and to “faithfully discharge” the duties they are about to assume. Sometimes described as an affirmative oath, this kind of pledge can be distinguished from belief, or test, oaths, which have been struck down as unconstitutional in their requiring the individual to attest to an absence of past or present political beliefs or associations.

Affirmative oaths are not without their problems, however, as two adjunct faculty members who are Quakers learned this past year. In fall 2007, Wendy Gonaver was preparing for her first teaching assignment at Cal State Fullerton when informed that she had to sign the California oath. She sought to attach a statement to the oath explaining that signing it would be contrary to her “nonviolent beliefs as a Quaker.” Administration officials rebuffed her efforts to submit a statement of any sort, stating that there are “no exceptions allowed” to the oath within the CSU system. Gonaver did not waver in her objection to the oath, whereupon the administration told her just before the start of classes that she would not be allowed to teach. Gonaver, represented by the People for the American Way Foundation, is currently seeking reinstatement.

In March 2008, Marianne Kearney-Brown, a mathematics instructor at Cal State East Bay, lost her position for refusing to sign the oath. Her attempt to insert the word “nonviolently” before the phrase “support and defend” the constitution was rejected by the university administration. The administration, however, reappointed Kearney-Brown after the office of the state attorney general drafted a statement for her which declared that signing the oath carries no obligation or requirement for public employees to bear arms or otherwise engage in violence.

The oath resisted by Gonaver and Kearney-Brown has no doubt been signed by thousands, and no doubt has been seen as a harmless remnant of a dark period in American history. The harm done by this oath and ones similar to it in other states can be measured in the respect that insistence upon its signing led to the termination of appointments of two university teachers. Others may have quietly sought opportunities elsewhere rather than sign the oath.

Affirmative oaths are not likely to fade away any time soon, but refusal to sign the oath should not, in and of itself, be a justifiable reason for not appointing a faculty member or for terminating an appointment. The resolution of the Kearney-Brown case shows what can be done consistent with the interests of an institution of higher learning and the rights of faculty members. It is not too much to hope that public colleges and universities required to administer the oath will appoint and retain faculty members as determined by academic considerations, not dictated by legislative enactments.

(5/08)

West Virginia: Resign, Faculty Tells University President

The New York Times: Resign, Faculty Tells University President

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — The West Virginia University faculty demanded on Wednesday that the president of the university, Mike Garrison, quit over the awarding of a degree to Gov. Joe Manchin III’s daughter, the second call for his resignation in 10 days.

West Virginia: WVU faculty: President Garrison must go

Pittsburgh Post Gazette: WVU faculty: President Garrison must go

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — More than 500 West Virginia University faculty members today called for the resignation of President Mike Garrison in the wake of the M.B.A scandal rocking the state’s flagship university.

Treatment of Adjunct Faulted at U. of New Haven

Inside Higher Ed: Treatment of Adjunct Faulted at U. of New Haven

For many faculty members who aren’t on the tenure track, job security is elusive. At the University of New Haven, as at a growing number of institutions, procedures exist to give multi-year contracts to those who have performed well for set periods of time. But a report being released today by the American Association of University Professors finds that this system failed an instructor — who found herself booted (unfairly, the AAUP believes) just as she was about to get a multi-year contract.

One-Third of West Virginia U.’s Faculty Meets, Reaffirming Calls for President’s Ouster

The Chronicle: One-Third of West Virginia U.’s Faculty Meets, Reaffirming Calls for President’s Ouster

A gathering of more than one-third of all full-time faculty members at West Virginia University voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to call on their institution’s president, Michael S. Garrison, to resign over his involvement in the awarding of an unearned executive M.B.A. degree to the daughter of the state’s governor.

Connecticut: AAUP Criticizes U. of New Haven Over Lecturer’s Dismissal

The Chronicle: AAUP Criticizes U. of New Haven Over Lecturer’s Dismissal

A report released today by the American Association of University Professors says the University of New Haven disregarded standard academic practices when it dismissed a lecturer last year following students’ complaints that she was hostile and uncivil.

The report says that even though the lecturer, Marianna M. Vieira, did not have a position on the tenure track, she should have been given access to some grievance procedures. In denying her access to those procedures, says the report, the university violated the AAUP’s 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure.

Scholar of Asian Art Is Found Dead in U.S. Detention Center

AP: Indicted museum director found dead at WA federal prison

A Thailand museum director who was indicted as part of a federal investigation into looted antiquities died Wednesday at the Federal Detention Center in SeaTac, apparently following a heart attack.

Roxanna Brown, a 62-year-old U.S. citizen, passed away sometime around 2:30 Wednesday morning. Prison spokeswoman Maggie Ogden said an autopsy was planned.

UK: Not enough done’ against campus antisemitism

The Guardian: Not enough done’ against campus antisemitism

Antisemitism in universities remains a major concern and the government needs to do more work to address it, an all party group of MPs has warned.

Ohio: HR Chief Fired Over Anti-Gay Column

Inside Higher Ed: The University of Toledo has fired Crystal Dixon as associate vice president of human resources following an uproar over a column she wrote asserting that gay people can change their sexual orientation and could never be considered “civil rights victims.” In the column, she compared herself as a black woman to a gay person. She wrote: “I take great umbrage at the notion that those choosing the homosexual lifestyle are ‘civil rights victims.’ Here’s why. I cannot wake up tomorrow and not be a Black woman. I am genetically and biologically a Black woman and very pleased to be so as my Creator intended. Daily, thousands of homosexuals make a life decision to leave the gay lifestyle….” An assistant to Dixon’s lawyer said that she was considering suing the university, either on First Amendment or other grounds. A statement from the university defended the dismissal saying that Dixon’s views were “in direct contradiction to university policies and procedures, as well as the institutional core values as defined in our strategic plan, and called into question her continued ability to lead a critical function within the administration as personnel actions or decisions taken in her capacity as associate vice president for human resources could be challenged or placed at risk.”

Honor for Schlafly stirs furor

St Louis Post-Dispatch: Honor for Schlafly stirs furor

Wash U protest over Schlafly

If there’s one thing that opponents and supporters of conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly agree on, it’s that she doesn’t beat around the bush.

Students Fail — and Professor Loses Job

Inside Higher Ed: Students Fail — and Professor Loses Job

Who is to blame when students fail? If many students fail — a majority even — does that demonstrate faculty incompetence, or could it point to a problem with standards?

These are the questions at the center of a dispute that cost Steven D. Aird his job teaching biology at Norfolk State University. Today is his last day of work, but on his way out, he has started to tell his story — one that he suggests points to large educational problems at the university and in society. The university isn’t talking publicly about his case, but because Aird has released numerous documents prepared by the university about his performance — including the key negative tenure decisions by administrators — it is clear that he was denied tenure for one reason: failing too many students. The university documents portray Aird as unwilling to compromise to pass more students.

Georgia: ‘Time Out’ to Reconsider Core Changes

Inside Higher Ed: ‘Time Out’ to Reconsider Core Changes

Many a curricular overhaul is controversial. At the University System of Georgia, where two preliminary plans were met with intense skepticism from some quarters earlier this year, the uproar is causing second thoughts among administrators, who wrote in a letter to faculty members on Monday that they would “halt the current core revision process until later in the year” to allow for more input from faculty at each of the 35 campuses, and “to take stock of where we are.”

The decision, announced by Susan Herbst, the system’s chief academic officer and executive vice chancellor, was a partial about-face that was cheered by many of the plans’ critics. Since the changes were announced, they maintained that faculty were not properly included in the planning stages and that the proposals — still preliminary and short on specifics, to be sure — would water down instruction and training in vital subject areas.

State High-School Exit Tests Do Not Improve Academic Achievement, Study Finds

The Chronicle: State High-School Exit Tests Do Not Improve Academic Achievement, Study Finds

A new study has found that state requirements that students pass exit tests to graduate from high school appear to do nothing to improve achievement on federal reading and mathematics tests.

The study, the results of which have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication in the journal Educational Policy, compared the reading and math scores of children in states with exit examinations to the scores of children elsewhere in the United States and concluded that there was no evidence that requiring passage of such tests improved academic achievement in those subject areas.

South Dakota: Roman Catholic College Disinvites Pro-Choice Speaker

Aberdeen News: Senator says PC disinvited her over stance on abortion
Turbak Berry was scheduled to speak at commencement

A state senator who was scheduled to speak at Presentation College’s commencement Saturday in Aberdeen said she was disinvited because of her views on abortion.

Sen. Nancy Turbak Berry, of Watertown, said she heard of the college’s decision not to allow her to address the graduates on Friday.

How It Does It: The RIAA Explains How It Catches Alleged Music Pirates

The Chronicle: How It Does It: The RIAA Explains How It Catches Alleged Music Pirates

To catch college students trading copyrighted songs online, the Recording Industry Association of America uses the same file-sharing software that online pirates love, an RIAA representative told The Chronicle at the organization’s offices during a private demonstration of how it catches alleged music pirates. He also said the group does not single out specific colleges in its investigations.

North Carolina: Colleges to bar undocumented students

News & Observer: Colleges to bar illegal immigrants

RALEIGH – The community college system will no longer admit illegal immigrants to degree programs based on an advisory letter from the Office of the Attorney General, the system announced today.

Community college officials made the decision based on a May 6 letter from the Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office and a subsequent meeting with officials in the office.

U. of Colorado at Boulder Wants to Hire ‘Professor of Conservative Thought’

Wall Street Journal: Help Wanted: Lefty College Seeks Right-Wing Prof
CU-Boulder Bid to Endow A ‘Conservative’ Chair
Leaves Both Sides Uneasy

BOULDER, Colo. — How liberal is the University of Colorado at Boulder?

The campus hot-dog stand sells tofu wieners. A recent pro-marijuana rally drew a crowd of 10,000, roughly a third the size of the student body. And according to one professor’s analysis of voter registration, the 800-strong faculty includes just 32 Republicans.

Chancellor G.P. “Bud” Peterson surveys this landscape with unease. A college that champions diversity, he believes, must think beyond courses in gay literature, Chicano studies and feminist theory. “We should also talk about intellectual diversity,” he says. So over the next year, Mr. Peterson plans to raise $9 million to create an endowed chair for what is thought to be the nation’s first Professor of Conservative Thought and Policy.

Mr. Peterson’s quest has been greeted with protests from some faculty and students, who say the move is too — well, radical. “Why set aside money specifically for a conservative?” asks Curtis Bell, a teaching assistant in political science. “I’d rather see a quality academic than someone paid to have a particular perspective.”

Even some conservatives who have long pushed for balance in academia voice qualms. Among them is David Horowitz, a conservative agitator whose book “The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America” includes two Boulder faculty members: an associate professor of ethnic studies who writes about the intersection of Chicano and lesbian issues, and a philosophy professor focused on feminist politics and “global gender justice.”

Has Canadian labour given up the fight?

Financial Post: Has Canadian labour given up the fight?

When lawmakers were busy sketching out the details of the North American Free Trade agreement in 1988, Buzz Hargrove, then assistant to Canadian Auto Workers president Bob White, said the union would “fight like hell” against lower U.S. wages and benefits that could creep into Canada.