Posted on 04/09/2005 5:25:05 AM PDT by rhema
Scott McConnell disputes the postmodern fads of elementary pedagogy, calling multiculturalism and lax discipline educational stumbling blocks. The former graduate student at Le Moyne College in Syracuse advocates a more traditional classroomcomplete with cultural value judgments and corporal punishment. Such ideas, according to Le Moyne officials, merit expulsion.
Mr. McConnell's story tops the Collegiate Network's 2005 Campus Outrage Awards, an annual listing of ridiculous happenings in academia. The Pollysso dubbed in mockery of political correctness run amokare meant to incite more than just chuckles among conservatives. "We want to focus national attention on the absurdity of political correctness on college campuses," said Sarah Longwell, the Collegiate Network's director of public affairs.
Mr. McConnell's case certainly qualifies. The soft-spoken advocate for traditional values enrolled at Le Moyne on a conditional basis last fall, needing to complete undergraduate coursework and earn no lower than a B+ in his first four classes to fully matriculate. Having satisfied both requirements, he was shocked to receive a letter four days before the spring quarter began, explaining that he would "not be allowed to register for any additional courses" because of "grave concerns regarding the mismatch between your personal beliefs regarding teaching and learning and the Le Moyne College program goals."
Mr. McConnell had expressed his politically incorrect vision of the ideal classroom in a paper last fallfor which he received an A. "I was very upset, because the reason they used to expel me is not outlined in the student handbook," he said. "I was under the mistaken impression that all colleges, public or private, support academic freedom."
As the Polly awards have aptly demonstrated for the last eight years, most colleges grant unchecked rein to liberal ideasno matter how offensive. Conservative speech, on the other hand, engenders outrage and disciplinary action.
UNLV economics professor Hans Hoppe, whose story earned the second-prize Polly award, commented during a lecture last year that homosexuals are less likely to engage in long-term financial planning because they typically do not have children. A student complaint prompted a grievance committee, which recommended Mr. Hoppe receive a reprimand and forfeit merit pay for the current academic year.
Mr. Hoppe eventually escaped disciplinary action but has received no apology for a university-backed yearlong assault on his character. He considers the negative press of the Polly award well deserved: "I hope it has an embarrassing effect. Let them chew on it for a while."
Mr. Hoppe calls the hostile reaction one of many increasingly "desperate attempts to silence the few conservatives at universities. If you're on the left, you can say anything you like."
The third-prize Polly award co-recipients confirm that double standard. Carnegie Mellon University sanctioned a campus visit from New Black Panther Party Chief Malik Zulu Shabazz, who publicly advocates killing Zionists. Duke University hosted the annual Palestine Solidarity Movement conference, during which speakers informed students about how to illegally enter Israel and admitted cooperation with terrorist groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Occidental College earned fourth prize for its reaction to student radio host Jason Antebi's sophomoric satire of his campus political opponentsthe "bearded feminist" and "Vander-douche." The school declared Mr. Antebi guilty of sexually harassing his entire audience and disbanded the student government after it came to his defense.
Harvard University received the fifth and final Polly for delivering a faculty vote of no confidence to president Lawrence Summers after he suggested inherent differences between the sexes might account for a higher male success rate in the sciences.
The Collegiate Network is not alone in standing up to academia. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) takes on numerous cases of unfair treatment each year and is currently assisting both Mr. McConnell and Mr. Antebi in their respective battles with Le Moyne and Occidental. Ms. Longwell called the winners of this year's Pollys especially vitriolic, noting a trend that has spiked sharply of late: Liberal campuses are setting aside the once apolitical value of academic freedom in favor of academic fascism. Ms. Longwell's Collegiate Network is fighting back: "We hope to hold universities accountable to provide true liberal arts education and not just indoctrinate students."
Colleges are fast going to hell in a hand basket.
So he was on double-secret probation? Sounds like time for a remake of a certain movie, called "Conservative House".</I>
"Nothing is over until we say it is! Was it over when Clinton was re-elected? No!"
It's the student loans or something.
It's rare, but there are some good people who are driven to teach. And unfortunately, in order to do so, you need to go after a degree that's become a laughingstock in "real" education.
A good friend of mine did exactly that.
She's a brilliant girl, and could easily have gone into corporate law, but she loves literature, the english language, and children, so she went into teaching.
And she's an excellent teacher.
Mark
What I really don't understand is why some of these cases don't end up in the courts. They seem so absurd one would think that any school that takes money from the federal govt., would have to answer for what seems to be blatent bias toward conservatives.
That's true, but I think it is also a matter of supply and demand. There are lots of people with PhD's in the wings who would love to have those jobs, and I think that contributes to the viciousness of faculty politics.
It's a blatant bias AGAINST conservatives, not "towards" them. Academic is biased towards (or "in favor of") the commies/leftists.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.