There’s been a burst of debate around viewpoint diversity (an always controversial topic) in our pages and elsewhere. Will thread and describe the key arguments below…
First, writing for the @AAUP's magazine, Lisa Siraganian at Johns Hopkins outlined seven theses against viewpoint diversity.
She argues it's incoherent, a partisan Trojan horse, and antithetical to academia's truth-seeking mission. aaup.org/academe/issues…
@AAUP Siraganian's essay was met with lots of criticism - from @TheFIREorg, @AEI, and Michael Clune in @chronicle, among others.
Their critiques varied. But essentially, they argued that Siraganian had lost the plot: Public trust in college has cratered. Entire disciplines have ...
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle Strayed far from their fact-finding mission. Expanding the Overton Window of acceptable views is necessary to take higher ed off life support, they argue. A few links:
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle But @asymmetricinfo isn't buying it. She highlights the fundamental agreement between higher ed and the public that many professors arguably ignore:
The public gives them money. They expect something in return - something other than ideological siloing. washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/…
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle @asymmetricinfo My 2 cents, as someone who covers academic culture, is that I've made this point (less bluntly) to professors I interview, who are sometimes surprised they have this reputation. Or they insist higher ed isn't actually that left-leaning. (To which I say...let's look at the data.)
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle @asymmetricinfo When you work in any industry dominated by certain political assumptions and convictions, it can lead to a fishbowl effect. You stop seeing how others see you, and you start seeing the outside world through specific distortions. (Journalism is no different, of course.)
...
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle @asymmetricinfo But anecdotally, since the election, I've certainly heard more people I interview express the opinion that viewpoint diversity is needed in the academy.
It seems - again, anecdotally - that at least some profs are rethinking where and how higher ed went off-track...
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle @asymmetricinfo So, will viewpoint diversity's champions gain some ground? Or will Siraganian and other profs who think it's an argument made in bad faith win the day?
And how much does any of this matter, anyway, when the spate of federal reform is so intense right now?
Who's to say!
@AAUP @TheFIREorg @AEI @chronicle @asymmetricinfo Threading this post from @AAUP as a coda:
NEW: I’ve been asking Harvard about its investigation into alleged plagiarism by President Gay, and tonight, they provided some new information to @chronicle. I’ll thread it here. Bear with me... chronicle.com/article/how-ba…
@chronicle First, Harvard says the U and Gay learned of the allegations when contacted by the New York Post, in October.
Five days later, President Gay asked the Harvard Corporation to "conduct an independent review of the articles referenced" in the Post’s outreach.
@chronicle The Post has said it asked about two journal articles and her 1993 essay.
Per Harvard, the corporation put together a subcommittee to assess the allegations.
On Nov. 2, three experts with no ties to Harvard were appointed to undertake a review. nypost.com/2023/12/12/new…
Turns out you can major in puppetry at West Virginia University and (pretty much) nowhere else.
Students in the program told me they love pursuing their niche craft in college. They're learning skills, they say, and it gives them a sense of community. chronicle.com/article/fuzz-c…
But the program is in danger. The major was almost eliminated in 2021, and another round of program cuts threatens its future again.
That’s because WVU is in crisis. It faces a $45M deficit, declining enrollment, rising costs, etc. (You know the deal.) chronicle.com/article/fuzz-c…
I'm very interested in how colleges will respond to these 'divisive concept' bills becoming law.
If you are too, here's one example. The University of Florida just sent a presentation to faculty on the newly signed Stop Woke Act...
First there’s a short intro by Kent Fuchs, the president. He says the presentation makes clear “you may continue to address important academic issues in your classes” and thanks profs for their “important role” as “objective" educators and teachers.
Now for the slides. There's a distillation of the law's "core message," which is that profs shouldn't preach their personal views as gospel, next to a picture of some sunflowers.
🧵There’s been *a lot* of chatter about College for All/budget reconciliation. Specifically about the possibility of requiring 75% of instruction at public colleges be provided by tenure-track and tenured faculty.
What’s going on? Let’s dive in…
That language is included in the CFA bill, introduced earlier this year. The bill would also require public colleges to prioritize hiring existing adjuncts and contingent faculty for TT roles.
As of right now, that bill’s not going anywhere.
Currently, Congress is going through a process called reconciliation with Biden’s Build Back Better bill. It includes lots of stuff, like 2 years of free community college.
Faculty groups are advocating for it to include that 75% requirement. But it (almost certainly) won't...
More stunning reporting from @kennyjacoby on the LSU sexual harassment scandal.
An LSU administrator told Jacoby that she was tormented by several athletics officials after she reported Les Miles’ behavior. She says she suffered retaliation that continues to this day.
@kennyjacoby "Miles repeatedly pressured Lewis to replace Black student workers on her recruiting staff with blond women or light-skinned Black women whom he considered prettier, Lewis said. When she refused, she said, he directed others to get Lewis to comply with his demands."
"Miles came to her office and told her they had 'too many fat girls, Black girls and ugly girls,' and they 'look like a bad bowling team.' She said he described ugly girls as 'a.m. girls' who should be relegated to office work, and “blondes with big boobs” as 'p.m. girls.'"