Welcome to Academic Freedom - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Welcome to Academic Freedom

Description:

... of campus facilities, including mail and email, for partisan political purposes; Faculty should not use the classroom for partisan political campaigning. 34 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:467
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: williams83
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Welcome to Academic Freedom


1
Welcome to Academic Freedom
  • New Faculty Orientation
  • August 11, 2009
  • Prof. Peter B. Bayer,
  • Boyd School of Law, UNLV

2
Important Sources to Determine Scope and Limits
of Academic Freedom
  • The First Amendment of the United States
    Constitution.
  • Nevada System of Higher Education Code, Regents
    Handbook, UNLV Bylaws.
  • Professional Associations such as AAUP
  • Good judgment good sense.

3
  • The Logic of Academic Freedom
  • Academic freedom creates the space for
    questions, takes some of the risk out of
    experimentation, and protects unpopular ideas
    until they find their own place in the spectrum
    of whats thinkableor until they disappear of
    their own accord.
  • Association of American University Professors
    (AAUP), Academic Freedom and Freedom of
    Expression, an AAUP Position Paper (June 2003)

4
NSHE Code, Title 2, Chap.2, sec. 2.1.1
  • 2.1.1   Higher Education and the Common Good.
  • Institutions of higher education are conducted
    for the common good and not to further the
    interest of either the individual member of the
    faculty or the institution. The continued
    existence of the common good depends upon the
    free search for truth and knowledge and their
    free exposition.
  • (borrowed from AAUP 1940 Statement of Principles
    on Academic Freedom and Tenure)

5
NSHE Code, Title 2, Chap.2, sec. 2.1.2
  • 2.1.2  Academic Freedom. Academic freedom is
    essential to these purposes and is applicable to
    both teaching and research. Freedom in teaching
    is fundamental for the protection of the rights
    of the teacher in teaching and of the student in
    learning. Freedom in research is fundamental to
    the advancement of truth and knowledge. A member
    of the faculty has freedom and an obligation, in
    the classroom or in research, to discuss and
    pursue the faculty member's subject with candor
    and integrity, even when the subject requires
    consideration of topics which may be politically,
    socially or scientifically controversial.
    (Emphasis added.)

6
NSHE Code, Title 2, Chap.2, sec. 2.1.2, cond.
  • In order to insure the freedom to seek and
    profess truth and knowledge the faculty member
    shall not be subjected to censorship or
    discipline by the Nevada System of Higher
    Education on grounds that the faculty member has
    expressed opinions or views which are
    controversial, unpopular or contrary to the
    attitudes of the Nevada System of Higher
    Education or the community. (B/R 4/02)

7
Academic Freedom in the Library
  • UNLVs Lied Library has a number of policies
    related to the vigorous protection of
    researchers academic freedom, including not
    filtering internet access, internet usage record
    retention policies, and such.

8
First Amendment, U.S. Const.
  • In a public university, academic freedom is a
    special category of 1st Amendment-protected free
    speech, based on a fundamental 1st Amendment
    value
  • the search for truth, or creation of knowledge,
    is best undertaken within a free marketplace of
    ideas.

9
More on the First Amendment
  • The First Amendment is never absolute
  • Interests in free expression are always balanced
    against competing interests
  • e.g., crying fire in a crowded theatre?
  • Falsely yelling fire in a theater (and causing
    a panic) has no protection because safety may
    trump free expression if the threat is dire
    enough and the expression creates a clear and
    present danger of imminent harm
  • What other countervailing interests limit
    academic freedom?

10
Employment Matters Vs. Free Speech
  • Professing to the public, to the profession and
    to the classroom clearly are protected by the
    First Amendment.
  • But, what about memoranda, discussions at faculty
    and other meetings and similar expressions of
    opinion or dissent as part of contexts internal
    to the government employer?

11
Government As Employer
  • Some federal courts have ruled that faculty
    opinions regarding hiring, curriculum and similar
    subjects expressed during the course of private
    faculty meetings or in internal memoranda, are
    not necessarily protected as academic freedom
    under the U.S. Constitution

12
Pending Proposals of the Academic Freedom
Ethics Committee
  • (1) the Senate should both recommend an amendment
    to the HESC Code and enact bylaws revisions
    clarifying that academic freedom includes all
    expression of opinions regarding all academic
    matters including hiring, retention and other
    employment issues, regardless whether the
    expressions of opinion are made publically or in
    contexts such as faculty meetings which are
    outside of immediate public review

13
AFEs Proposed Code Provision on Arbitrariness
  • The following conduct, being incompatible with
    the purposes of an academic community, is
    prohibited any adverse employment action not
    based on good cause, including, but not limited
    to, any adverse employment action that is
    arbitrary, capricious, retaliatory, vindictive,
    contrary to the principles of an academic
    community or otherwise is based on reasons
    unrelated to cause or to legitimate business
    needs

14
AFEs Proposal Re Contracts
  • The Senate should urge that the foregoing
    protections be incorporated into employment
    contracts.
  • (AFEs analyses and proposals do not and are not
    intended to constitute legal opinion.)

15
In Sum
  • The First Amendment, Nevada-specific codes and
    regulations, and good judgment all use the same
    analytical framework
  • academic freedom
  • is balanced against
  • academic responsibility

16
Academic Responsibility
  • According to
  • -- the First Amendment cases
  • -- the Nevada System of Higher Education Code
  • -- much of the writing about academic freedom
    and -- good sense
  • the competing interest is the academics
    responsibility to maintain professional standards
    of teaching and scholarship.

17
Academic Freedom Responsibility, NSHE Code.,
Title 2, Chapter 2, Section 2
  • Section 2.1 Declaration of Policy  
  • 2.1.1 Higher Education and the Common Good  
  • 2.1.2 Academic Freedom  
  • 2.1.3 Academic Responsibility  
  • 2.1.4 Acts Interfering with Academic Freedom  
  • Section 2.2 Applicability  
  • Section 2.3 Freedoms and Responsibility  
  • 2.3.1 Freedom in Research  
  • 2.3.2 Freedom to Publish  
  • 2.3.3 Freedom in the Classroom  
  • 2.3.4 Faculty as Citizens  
  • 2.3.5 Obligations and Responsibilities

18
NSHE, Title 2, Chap. 2, sec. 2.1.3
  • Academic Responsibility . The concept of
    academic freedom is accompanied by the equally
    demanding concept of academic responsibility. A
    member of the faculty is responsible for the
    maintenance of appropriate standards of
    scholarship and instruction.

19
The Limits on Academic Freedom
  • Our interests in free expression are balanced
    against our interests in appropriate standards
    of scholarship and instruction
  • What are appropriate standards of scholarship
    and instruction?
  • Perhaps best analogized to time, place and
    manner regulation under the 1st Amendment.

20
Academic Responsibility Professionalism in
General
  • Academic responsibility requires professors to
    submit their knowledge and claims to rigorous and
    public review by peers who are experts in the
    subject matter under consideration to ground
    their arguments in the best available evidence
    and to work together to foster the education of
    students.
  • (Association of American Colleges Universities,
    Board of Directors' Statement, Jan. 6, 2006, at 1)

21
Appropriate Standards of Teaching (Academic
Responsibility)
  • 2.3.3  Freedom in the Classroom . A member of the
    faculty is entitled to freedom in the classroom
    in discussing a subject, but the faculty member
    should be careful not to persist in discussing
    matters, which have no relation to the subject
    taught. (NSHE Code sec. 2.3.3, emphasis added)

22
Appropriate Standards of Teaching (Academic
Responsibility)
  • The Nevada System of Higher Education Code tells
    us explicitly Do not persist in discussion of
    unrelated subjects
  • (e.g., persistent discussion of gay rights in
    math class is not protected by academic freedom)

23
Appropriate Standards of Teaching (Academic
Responsibility)
  • Do not discriminate on the basis of race, color,
    religion, gender, national origin, ancestry, age
    disability, veteran status, or sexual
    orientation
  • -- whatever you say or do about race, gender,
    sexual orientation, religion, and the like,
    should be based on sound academic pedagogical
    goals
  • -- creating a hostile learning environment can be
    considered discrimination and otherwise may
    disrupt learning /or intimidate students

24
A General Guiding Rule
  • The more clearly your comments to students
    reflect support sound educational goals, the
    more likely they are protected by academic
    freedom.

25
  • e.g., comments about a students sexual
    attractiveness are not likely to be protected
    under academic freedom. (What is the educational
    purpose? Sexual harassment is not protected by
    academic freedom.)
  • e.g., comments about racial differences are
    appropriate when based on expertise and relevant
    to the subject, but can create a prohibited,
    hostile environment if not based on expertise or
    not relevant.

26
One Important Aspect of Higher Education
  • It is inevitable that students will encounter
    ideas, books, and people that challenge their
    preconceived ideas and beliefs.
  • (Association of American Colleges
    Universities, Board of Directors' Statement, Jan.
    6, 2006)

27
  • Students do not have a right to remain free from
    encountering unwelcome or inconvenient
    questions, in the words of Max Weber. Students
    who accept the literal truth of creation
    narratives do not have a right to avoid the study
    of the science of evolution in a biology course
    anti-Semites do not have a right to a history
    course based on the premise that the Holocaust
    did not happen.
  • (Association of American Colleges Universities,
    Board of Directors' Statement, Jan. 6, 2006)

28
  • Students do have a right to hear and examine
    diverse opinions, but within the frameworks that
    knowledgeable scholarsthemselves subject to
    rigorous standards of peer reviewhave determined
    to be reliable and accurate.
  • (Association of American Colleges
    Universities, Board of Directors' Statement, Jan.
    6, 2006)

29
Recap of Appropriate Standards of Teaching
(Academic Responsibility)
  • Persistent discussion of unrelated topics is not
    protected by academic freedom
  • Harassment (e.g., racial, sexual, tormenting
    students) is not protected by academic freedom
  • Words or conduct that create a discriminatory,
    hostile, or intimidating learning environment are
    not protected by academic freedom
  • Lack of professional competence in your subject
    area is not protected by academic freedom.

30
Faculty as Public Citizens
  • 2.3.4   Faculty as Citizens . A member of the
    faculty is a citizen of the community, a member
    of a learned profession and an employee of an
    educational institution. A faculty member
    speaking, writing or acting as a citizen shall be
    free from institutional censorship or discipline.
    (NSHE Code, Title 2, Chap. 2, sec. 2.3.4.)

31
Faculty as Public Citizens, cond.
  • 2.3.5. Obligations and Responsibilities .
  • The special position of a member of the faculty
    imposes special obligations and responsibilities.
    As a person of learning and an employee of an
    educational institution, a faculty member should
    remember that the public may judge the profession
    and the institution by the faculty member's
    utterances and acts. NSHE Code, sec. 2.3.5.

32
Faculty as Public Citizens, cond.
  • 2.3.5 Obligations and Responsibilities (NSHE
    Code)
  • Therefore, a faculty member should at all times
    be accurate, should exercise appropriate
    restraint, should show respect for the opinions
    of others and should indicate clearly that the
    faculty member is not an institutional
    spokesperson. NSHE Code, sec. 2.3.5 (B/R 4/02)

33
Faculty as Public Citizens
  • University policies prohibit the use of campus
    facilities, including mail and email, for
    partisan political purposes
  • Faculty should not use the classroom for partisan
    political campaigning.

34
Faculty As University Citizens
  • Not all business conducted by faculty or
    administrators of a public university is
    protected by the 1st Amendment.
  • Acting as would a citizen is Constitutionally
    protected. (E.g., writing letters to authorities
    concerning matters of true public concern.)
  • Routine conduct of business even vital business
    such as hiring/promotion/tenure -- may not be
    protected by the 1st Amendment.

35
Academic Freedom Resources
  • 1. For complete NSHE Code, UNLV Bylaws, use
    Faculty Senate website http//facultysenate.unlv
    .edu/
  • The Faculty Senate also has a Standing Committee
    on Academic Freedom and Ethics
  • American Association of University Professors
    (AAUP) Academic Freedom materials at www.aaup.org
  • 4. Association of American Colleges
    Universities, Board of Directors' Statement, Jan.
    6, 2006 can be found athttp//www.aacu.org/about/
    statements/academic_freedom.cfm
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com