Sounding Board -- Michael Leigh
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This is regarding the Bell Curve -- “A lost chance to debate academic
freedom” (Dec. 27). I’ve been a professor of speech-communication at
Orange Coast College for 25 years and am the immediate past president of
the Academic Senate. I also coached our speech and debate team to its
first national championships, so I’m not unfamiliar with issues of
argument in an educational setting.
During the days of the Vietnam War, which Bell mentioned in the
context of his teaching at UC Irvine, I was organizing the local
activities of Sam Brown’s Vietnam Moratorium during my undergraduate days
at the University of Redlands. Thus, I’m sensitive to issues of protest
and academic freedom. Yes, there were similar events to that involving
OCC professor Ken Hearlson, but I’d quarrel that they constitute an
entirely apt analogy.
The key difference is the nature of the student audience. It’s become
decidedly more international, and that means teachers are required to be
much more open to a variety of opinions and backgrounds. At OCC, we rely
on international student enrollment. In fact, we’d barely be solvent
without it. Students from Japan, Europe and the Middle East pay huge fees
that allow us some discretionary money for student programs that we
simply wouldn’t have otherwise. They also represent an opportunity for a
more global perspective, especially in classes like political science.
I’ve been quietly grinding my teeth about the publicity directed at
Hearlson’s indiscretions, especially one article that stopped just short
of portraying him as some sort of populist hero. The fact that this is
not the first time he has had trouble with Muslim students should give us
a clue that he’s not adapting very well to these increasingly
multicultural times.
My argumentation and persuasion class features some very hot debates,
involving as many as a dozen nationalities at a time, including Muslim
students, and I’ve never had to call security to accompany me to my car.
Why? Because I know that you have to entertain all points of view in a
rational discussion, and that the flint and steel of argument and
rebuttal strike sparks, but also make the light by which all ideas are
illuminated.
That is academic freedom, not just teachers saying what they want to
say, but teachers and students getting their moment to speak.
Yet this was never really an academic freedom issue, although we did
have very frank, if unpublished, debates about that issue on campus. The
truth is that indiscreet speech is simply indiscreet speech.
Awkward and insensitive expression is not essential to academic
freedom.
I think Bell’s column came close to saying what should be said: That
Hearlson, a nice enough fellow, simply lost his temper, which happens,
but that he has no right to force a Christian conservative agenda in the
classroom of a public school occupied by students of multiple faiths. I
suspect that’s pretty much what the “letter of reprimand” said.
What galls me most is that Hearlson found it necessary to grandstand
for the press as though he’d been terribly wronged by said letter of
reprimand.
I’m not offering any particular defense of how the administration
handled the situation, though I think it was pretty much benign, but the
notion that this all had a “chilling effect” on academic freedom is
ridiculous, as well as insulting to this faculty.
In fact, when I left for Christmas break -- which I celebrated,
privately, as a Christian -- a petition expressing anger at the idea that
we’re halting frank classroom discussion over this matter was being
circulated among faculty. Many professors with more notable credentials
than Hearlson are signing that petition. I did too. We want the community
to know that this is not representative of how we behave toward our
students of various race, color and creed.
MICHAEL LEIGH
Costa Mesa
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