Academic Bias Cited at Colorado
Schools
By Valerie Richardson -- The
Washington Times, 09/10/04
DENVER -- Four Colorado university presidents testified yesterday that
their institutions are making progress in protecting students from academic
bias, but several students said otherwise.
In a hearing before the
General Assembly's Joint Education Committee, students testified or submitted
statements about recent incidents in which professors vilified Republicans,
called conservative students "Nazis" and other names, and even implied that
students' grades would be affected by their political views.
Their
testimony came as presidents at the four main state universities told the
committee they were working to comply with the March "memorandum of
understanding" in which they pledged to protect students from academic
discrimination.
State Senate Majority Leader John Andrews said he was
pleased by their progress, but emphasized that recent events show conservative
students are still subject to academic bias.
"I've had three
unsolicited complaints in the last 30 days," said Mr. Andrews. "They're
indicative of a climate and culture where a lot of faculty feel free to demean
personally and intellectually bully conservative and Republican students in a
way they would never do to students in protected classes."
Republican
legislators took up the issue of academic bias last year in response to
complaints from students and conservative activist David Horowitz's campaign
to eliminate what he describes as discrimination against conservative
viewpoints in higher education.
Republican state Rep. Shawn Mitchell
responded with anti-bias legislation, but agreed to drop the bill last year
after university officials said they would sign the memorandum and confront
the issue on their own. The memorandum requires the universities to support
the concept of academic freedom, review their student grievance procedures,
publicize students' academic-freedom rights, and encourage campus speakers
with a wide range of views.
Presidents at the four universities -- the
University of Colorado at Boulder, Colorado State University, Metro State
University of Denver, and the University of Northern Colorado -- reported
progress on all fronts. The University of Northern Colorado won praise for
including "political affiliation" and "military service" in its
anti-discrimination policy.
At the same time, some officials said they
worried about the possibility of a negative impact on faculty. At Metro State,
for example, professor Oneida Meranto received an official reprimand and
warning in August after she disclosed information about a conservative
student's classroom performance to the press.
The incident "sent a
real chill through the classrooms," said Metro State interim President Raymond
Kieft. "Faculty are a lot more cautious about what they say, the topics they
handle, because they're not sure what's acceptable and not acceptable."
He acknowledged that the school is conducting a second investigation
into Ms. Meranto's conduct after William Pierce, a Metro student, said that
she told students Aug. 23 that only liberals would be able to succeed in her
course.
"She said that only those of us on the left were capable of
thinking critically. If you do not believe you can think critically, you will
not be successful in this class," said Mr. Pierce, who dropped the class
because he "did not feel ... that I could be graded fairly in her class."
Mario Nicolais, a University of Colorado law school student, said
professor David Hill told his class three weeks ago that "the R in Republican
stands for racist," called Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas an "Uncle
Tom," and when confronted about such remarks, said "there are plenty of other
Nazis like you out there."