More details in TFA. Nice recipe for turning your state into an intellectual+educational backwater.


A new Indiana law allows universities to revoke a professor’s tenure if they don’t promote so-called “intellectual diversity” in the classroom.

Supporters of the measure say it will make universities more accepting of conservative students and academics. But many professors worry the law could put their careers in jeopardy for what they say, or don’t say, in the classroom.

“I’d say it ends tenure in the state of Indiana as we know it,” said Ben Robinson, associate professor of Germanic Studies at Indiana University.

Tenure is supposed to mean indefinite employment for professors, where they can only be fired for cause or some extraordinary circumstance. According to Robinson, the status “allows faculty the freedom to pursue their inquiries and their teaching without fear of reprisal.”

But some academics in the state are worried that the new law allows university boards of trustees to interfere with tenure, which normally is handled by university departments.

That’s not how supporters see it.

Republican state Sen. Spencer Deery, a former chief of staff for the Purdue University president and the bill’s sponsor, said the new law would help conservative students feel more comfortable expressing their opinions on campus.

“The American public and Hoosiers as well are losing faith and trust in higher education,” Deery said. “One of the strong reasons for that is, frankly, higher education hasn’t done a great job of making every viewpoint feel welcome.”

The law also creates a system where students and staff can submit complaints that could be considered in tenure reviews.

The Purdue University Senate passed a resolution denouncing the bill.

The law does include some protections for faculty, preventing trustees from disciplining professors for criticizing the university or engaging in public commentary.

Irene Mulvey, president of the American Association of University Professors, said protections don’t go far enough.

“This is a big deal. This is a national thing,” she said. “I’ve read the bill, and it’s absolutely chilling.”

Indiana is the third state, after Florida and Texas, to redefine tenure in recent years. A survey of Florida faculty found that after its law passed, nearly half of professors said they planned to seek employment in another state.

“We are seeing the brain drain that we predicted in Texas and Florida, and I think Indiana will follow suit there,” Mulvey said.

2 points

This article is vague. I’m not clear on what the new law actually is. This article should have provided some examples of what professors are actually expected to do to follow this law.

permalink
report
reply
11 points

Scepticism has been weaponized by anti intellectualism. The demand that alternative facts be taken seriously has been coming for a while. The most popular comment on r/science was always ‘correllation does not equal causation’ and it was treated like esoteric wisdom, and a spell that invalidates all of scientific research. This law is the natural consequence. Good luck Americans.

permalink
report
reply
11 points

“They don’t teach my intellectually unsound, experimentally unverified viewpoint at the learning place!”

And I’m considered a snowflake for having and expressing human emotions. Jfc

permalink
report
reply
26 points

higher education hasn’t done a great job of making every viewpoint feel welcome

That’s fine, there are plenty of viewpoints that shouldn’t be welcome in college - I can’t flat earthers or 6000-year-history people passing geology, for example. The problem is that they have an entire generation of right-wing homeschooled kids who are being confronted by the unpleasant reality that their parents lied to them and did a shit job preparing them for the real world, and the parents are desperate for their charade (and their relationships with the kids they lied to) to continue for a few more years.

permalink
report
reply
19 points

So DEI is ok if it’s protecting delicate conservatives in schools?

Oh wait no, I see. DEI is ok if you don’t like it but want legal backing to fuck with all levels of education.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

So, before reading the comments I copied a bit of text and was literally going to say “so, DEI” which is of course is one of the huge complaints with GOPers

Supporters of the measure say it will make universities more accepting of conservative students and academics. But many professors worry the law could put their careers in jeopardy for what they say, or don’t say, in the classroom.

Quite rich…

permalink
report
parent
reply

United States | News & Politics

!usa@lemmy.ml

Create post

Community stats

  • 4.5K

    Monthly active users

  • 4.8K

    Posts

  • 30K

    Comments