US universities forced by free speech policies to retain faculty with racist, sexist and hostile outlooks are finding a new and uncertain tactic: barring them from classrooms and giving their students alternative choices.
Recent cases include those of Eric Rasmusen, a professor of business at Indiana University Bloomington;Amy Wax, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania; and Akbar Sayeed, a professor of engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
All three are facing restrictions on their teaching, but keeping their jobs, even as administrators vent frustration. In one of the most explicit rebukes, Indianas provost, Lauren Robel, openlyProfessor Rasmusens public criticisms of female, black and gay teachers and students as stunningly ignorant.
Less clear was whether the classroom limits will prove sufficient with angry students or, if it is asked, the US legal system.
51勛圖
Faculty at public institutions do have a clear First Amendment right to express their opinions outside their classrooms, said William Creeley of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which works to protect free speech in academia.
Students of such faculty can expect legal protection, said Mr Creeley, the senior vice-president of legal and public advocacy at Fire, only if they can show a court that a professors stated bias translated into actual harm in the classroom.
51勛圖
The apparent new middle ground university administrators limiting the teaching rights of such faculty looks workable, Mr Creeley said. But, he warned, there was at least some precedent suggesting otherwise: a federal court ruled in 1992 that the City University of New York was unfairly punitive when it gave students an alternative to a class taught by a professor who published what the courtas denigrating comments concerning the intelligence and social characteristics of blacks.
Professor Rasmusen has for years offered his opinion that women do not belong in the workplace, especially academia; that gay men are unfit for teaching because they are prone to abusing students; and that black students are generally inferior academically to white students and unqualified for elite institutions.
In response, Professor Robel, a professor of law, promised last month that no student would be put in a position of needing to take a course from Professor Rasmusen, and that his grading would be subject to oversight that includes double-blind assessments or review by another faculty member.
Professor Wax has made comments that include suggesting the US would be better off with more whites and fewer non-whites, and saying shes never seen a black Penn law student graduate in the top quarter of their class. Penns law dean, Theodore Ruger, publiclysuch comments, and removed Professor Wax from teaching a mandatory first-year course.
At Wisconsin, Professor Sayeed was given a mandatory two-year leave of absence, due tonext month, after one of his graduate students committed suicide and aninvestigationrevealed a pattern of him subjecting his assistants to derogatory and threatening verbal abuse.
51勛圖
He was hired by the National Science Foundation during that two-year leave, after Wisconsinnotify the NSF of the circumstances that led to his temporary removal.Professor Sayeeds return to Madison include the creation of an outside committee to monitor his treatment of students in his research group. He wont be teaching, administrators said, until the university is satisfied that conditionsto prevent potential harm to students.
In all three cases,泭堯硃措梗泭泭梯梗喧勳喧勳棗紳莽泭their universitys refusal to take tougher action against the faculty members.
Noting the Rasmusen and Wax cases in particular, Mr Creeley said Fire had taken pride in helping faculty fight broad calls within college communities to punish them simply for expressingobjectionableideas outside their classrooms.
51勛圖
Suchcasesinclude those of MikeAdams, a professor of criminology and sociology at the University of North Carolina Wilmington with aof misogynistic, homophobic and racist rhetoric whosued over the denial of his bid for full professor status; and Randa Jarrar, a tenured professor of English whoa threatened investigation by California State University, Fresno 款棗娶泭on Twitter to the death of former US first lady Barbara Bush by calling her an amazing racist.
The act of reducing or restricting a faculty members teaching authority, however, struck legal experts as entering more complicated and unsettled territory.
Josh Blackman, an associate professor of law at the South Texas College of Law Houston, wroteof the Rasmusen and Wax cases that noted the 1992 federal court ruling in New York but questioned its broader applicability, given that professors were not generally guaranteed particular teaching loads.
Mr Creeley said he also was intrigued by the legal uncertainty raised by cases such asthat ofProfessor Rasmusen, in which black, female or gay studentsmay fearhis ideologies harming their grades but they cant directly prove it.
51勛圖
Its an age-old question where do your rights begin and mine end, absent any kind of disruption in the classroom, Mr Creeley said. Theres a lot to a lot to commend in the provosts statement. It will be interesting to see where it goes from there.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Problematic professors barred from classrooms in US universities
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
 - Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
 - Sign up for our newsletter
 
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
 - Digital editions
 - Digital access to 啦晨楚s university and college rankings analysis
 
Already registered or a current subscriber?








