The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
"Egregious Violations of Academic Freedom at Collin College"
A report from the American Association of University Professors, apropos the incidents that I've blogged about before (generally relying on the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression's coverage):
Today, the AAUP published an investigative report concerning the Collin College administration's summary termination of the services of professors Lora Burnett, Suzanne Jones, and Michael Phillips.
Professor Burnett became the subject of national controversy in October 2020 for her tweets about the US vice-presidential debate, including one that urged Vice President Mike Pence to "shut his little demon mouth." A state representative texted Collin's president to point out that Burnett was "paid with taxpayer dollars"; the president replied that he was "aware of the situation" and "would deal with it." In denying her reappointment for the following year, the administration cited her "insubordinate" challenging of the administration and governing board on social media and institutional email lists during that controversy.
In acting against Professors Jones and Phillips, the administration charged them with using social media to exert "external pressure" on the administration regarding what many faculty members considered to be inadequate COVID-19 policies instead of using "internal communications processes." The administration's action against Jones also invoked "misuse of the college's name" because she had failed to prevent the Texas Faculty Association, of which she was a statewide and chapter officer, from listing her as a Collin College faculty member on its website and Facebook page.
The investigating committee found that the Collin administration's actions involved "egregious violations" of all three faculty members' academic freedom to speak as citizens and to criticize institutional policies, and, in the case of Phillips, of academic freedom in teaching. The committee determined that the administration dismissed Jones and Phillips from their appointments without a pretermination hearing before an elected faculty body in which the burden of demonstrating adequate cause for dismissal rests with the administration. The committee also found that the administration failed to afford Burnett the opportunity to petition an elected faculty committee to review her allegation that the nonrenewal decision violated her academic freedom.
The report concludes that the conditions for shared governance and academic freedom at Collin College are "grossly inadequate."
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Gonna be so much outrage here about THESE violations of academic freedom. Sooooo much.
There would be more if it ever were reciprocated by house lefties like yourself, who spend hours denigrating the right leaning professors on this blog daily.
I dont think I've ever denigrated a right-leaning professor, except maybe in passing.
It would help us readers if we had some idea of how much juice AAUP has.
Is this a big deal or a shrug off?
The AAUP burnt all of its credibility decades ago — it’s now nothing more than a partisan hack outfit. Look at what’s on the top of its website; https://www.aaup.org/
Yes, opposing Republicans, supporting strikes, and otherwise unionizing the faculty. My guess is that an outfit like that is gonna have a lot of support in a state like Texas.
The ONLY thing that could possibly happen would be the accrediters making a stink about this, but I don’t expect it.
I support the privilege of shared governance we generously bestow upon certain civil servants; however, there is a limit to that privilege just as there is a limit on the privilege of, for example, drinking alcohol that we bestow upon others of our fellow citizens. As we scold a few of our civil servants for behavior we find unacceptable, it is perfectly understandable that those so scolded will writhe and whine just as errant children often will do: it is equally understandable that the big-money labor unions which our civil servants choose to form will also write and whine, as any perceived slight is sufficient to elicit a tantrum.
Paradoxical instruction -- allowing children and servants to act out, to "scream as loud as you like" -- while consistently refusing to accede to demands may help reduce the frequency and offensiveness of the tantrums. At some point -- perhaps only at the point of hunger -- servants will learn their duty to serve their employers: while it is delightful to hear that some civil servants "work for truth and learning," the fact remains that all civil servants work, for a time, at the pleasure of the taxpayers who fund them.
I was going to say that report and a dime will buy you a cup of coffee. But these days coffee can set you back more than five bucks, so it just ain’t so anymore.
What do you plan to do about it?
Shared governance has been abused for so long that I think it is time to outright abolish it. Professors are not royalty, they have no right to be worshiped.
And if an adjunct professor tweeted something similar about Kamala Harris during her debate, and was subsequently not rehired, do you think we would even hear about it?
Of course not.
"Academic freedom" is a one-way street. It is only about the freedom to espouse left-wing ideas. William F. Buckley told us as much nearly three-quarters of a century ago in God and Man at Yale (1951), aptly subtitled "The Superstitions of 'Academic Freedom'". Naturally, things have only gotten much, much worse.
Do you prefer the form of “academic freedom” practiced by right-wingers at Wheaton, Franciscan, Liberty, Regent, Ouachita Baptist, Cedarbrook, Grove City, Oral Roberts, Ave Maria, Bob Jones, and essentially every other campus controlled by conservatives in America?
You seem to disregard that important issue. Why?
So, what's the solution? My answer: shut down Collin College, along with all other public colleges / universities. Private colleges / universities will continue practicing the sort of "academic freedom" you described, but at least not on taxpayers' dime.
It is interesting to find out about the egregious violations of academic freedom at Collin College, but it is so concerning. The safeguarding academic freedom and the detrimental effects that censorship and suppression can have on the pursuit of knowledge is a great topic for my college paper. If you're interested in reliable and honest reviews of educational services, I recommend visiting https://edubirdie.org/edubirdie-review-the-most-honest-and-reliable/ as they provide comprehensive reviews and insights into the amazing educational platform for students who need to have access to trustworthy resources.