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DATE | 2005-05-17 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] And while we are talking about Brooklyn College...
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Academic Terrorism: Prof. K.C. Johnson On Discrimination Against Non-Leftists At Brooklyn College (CUNY) David Storobin, Esq. - 5/19/2005 Prof. K.C. Johnson was involved in a nationally-known tenure fight. Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, where he's teaching, denied him tenure in the Fall of 2002 on the grounds that they disagreed with his politics. After being denied tenure by Brooklyn College, CUNY heads intervened and granted it to Prof. Johnson whose teaching and scholarship was described as "excellent". Personally, I am very familiar with bias at Brooklyn College. A while ago, then-Chairman of the Political Science Deparment let me know that, not being a liberal, I wouldn't be able teach there, but he can tell me where else I can apply. Another Professor there told me, "Come on, David, everyone knows the politics of Brooklyn College Professors." Hearing this, a graduate student told me that her Professor declared in class, "I should fail you for being a Bush-loving right-winger, but I'll be nice and will not." Today, K.C. Johnson describes from a Professor's point of view what is happening at Brooklyn College, including his tenure fight and students' response to what has been described by the media as "Academic Terrorism".
Q: Can you tell us what happened in your fight to receive tenure?
A: My case was a highly publicized one and was unusual one in that the college's claim was an explicitly ideologically one. Brooklyn College tried to deny tenure on the basis of collegiality, which the senior members defined as disagreeing on political issues and topics that should be part of the curriculum.
I was accused of criticizing a teach-in on the Middle East that lacked any speakers that supported the policies of either the United States or Israel. I was also accused of opposing gender quotas in personnel hiring matters.
My specialty is Twentieth Century History and so I was also attacked for teaching courses on people in power, claiming that only white males would be interested in them.
CUNY Board of trustees quickly decided in my favor. The Vice Chancellor of the CUNY General Council made a statement that CUNY reached a settlement because it could not win in court. The Chancellor of CUNY issued a videotaped statement to the Board of Trustees criticizing the decision to deny my tenure as incorrect.
Q: How quickly was your tenure question decided?
A: I was denied tenure in November 2002. A week later, it went public, and was resolved within 2 months, by early February 2003.
Q: Why did national media pick up your case?
A: My case was an unusually clear cut one. Often times, a college will make a claim that a person's scholarship or teaching wasn't good. Usually, they'll come up with some superficial reason to fire the person. In this case, the college admitted that my scholarship and teaching were "excellent" - "excellent" is the word they themselves used.
As for the people who went after me, I had private emails from them making clear that their ideological bias drove their fight against me. They wrote secret letters to the college's President where they were very clear on their ideological agenda, thinking that the letters wouldn't be public. The college was caught red-handed. Obviously, it is very unusual for a college to be caught red-handed like this.
Q: How common is it for Professor to be punished for his views at Brooklyn College and CUNY?
At Brooklyn College this is quite common. Our provost wrote that teaching is a political act and has argued that college's general education ["The Cores"] should teach students to be global citizens, not Americans, and otherwise promote explicitly far-left agenda.
Within CUNY, the university administration is very good, but the union wants an ideologically one-sided faculty.
Within academia as a whole, there have been a lot of surveys suggesting that the academia is ideologically one-sided. This past February a new survey showed that roughly 3/4 of professors are self-identified liberals or leftists. In 1984, the number was only 39%. In the general population, on the other hand, the percentage of the population that describes itself as liberal declined.
And if you take out the natural sciences [biology, chemistry, etc], probably 80-95% of professors are liberals. There is a clear imbalance ideologically.
This leads to real problems in the educational experience that the students achieve. If you look at staffing at departments of social sciences and humanities, there has been a decline or even elimination of traditional subjects, like U.S. Foreign Policy and U.S. History, which were replaced with subjects on race and gender, which have a role, but shouldn't be only ones taught to students.
Q: How do people in your department treat you now that you've received tenure?
Within the department, there were several people who strongly supported me. In the aftermath of my tenure, the chairman of the department who orchestrated my denial has been removed and the department just hired a new chair to take his place.
For the most part, within the department, I am treated very well. The people who went after me are going to remain the same, but the department is now more interested in fairness and scholarship. Replacing the chair resolved much of the situation.
Within the college as a whole, the ideological direction is very troubling. There is a growing number of faculty members on campus who are very concerned. My tenure case is becoming part of a broader pattern in the college and several Professors have come to consult with me.
Q: What departments are most hostile?
A: Usually African, Hispanic and other similar type of studies are most ideological, since they were explicitly founded with the agenda to promote claims of grievances by these groups.
Other than that, at Brooklyn College, the most biased departments are Political Science and Education. There is really only one point of view there.
Q: As far students are concerned, do you see students getting brainwashed or rebelling against leftist propaganda?
A: I see the latter. One of the things I see is that students are increasingly recognizing inappropriate behavior in college. Student government passed an Academic Bill of Rights saying professors shouldn't bring biases into the classroom.
There is a dichotomy of how students perceive this between the better students and the weaker ones. The better students are quite clearly aware and unhappy. The concern that I have is with weaker students who do not have a strong background in history and politics. They naturally assume that Professors are at least in some manner are going to be fair, or if not fair, at least will communicate all sides. For these students, it's a problem. They often don't understand that what the professor says is biased and accept it as truth. This is understandable since there is a presumption that a Professor is there to teach, not to promote his ideological bias.
Q: Did Brooklyn College know about your ideological points of view?
A: No. I am trained in US Political and Diplomatic History of the Twentieth Century. I published two books before I was hired, which were perceived as being written by a very left-wing person, so there was an assumption that I too was way, way on the left.
But I am centrist. The positions that I took were centrist. For example, if you are going to have a teach-in, you have to have speakers that are favorable to Israel, not just ones that oppose it. I never consider it to be conservative or liberal.
But at Brooklyn College, such statements are very conservative. If my positions would've been know, I never would've been hired. There was an assumption that I agreed with the majority of the college.
Q : Is that true for all of Brooklyn College, CUNY or academia as a whole?
Certainly, not all colleges discriminate against Professors and students, but in most departments do. Some colleges within CUNY, like Baruch, hire based on scholarship and teaching ability, but that's not true at Brooklyn College and many other schools.
Q: You've been involved in the Brooklyn College Chapter of Students for Academic Freedom. Can you tell us more about it.
The group was founded a year and a half ago by an undergraduate student [Eldad Yaron] whom I haven't met before this. He had become concerned about issues of bias in his classes and asked if I would be willing to work with him, and I obviously agreed. He has done an incredible job building support that students should not get propaganda in the classroom. The organization has 80 members and the newly elected student President is supporter. It's much stronger than in any other CUNY school because of Brooklyn College's very strong leftist bias, and students have begun to fight back.
David Storobin is a New York lawyer who received Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Rutgers University School of Law. His Master's Thesis (M.A. - Comparative Politics) deals with Extremist Movements in the Middle East and the historical causes for the rise of fundamentalism. Mr. Storobin's book "The Root Cause: The Rise of Fundamentalist Islam and its Threat to the World" will be published in 2005. editor-at-globalpolitician.com
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