Table of Contents
Law professor still subject to sanctions from Howard University for Brazilian wax hypothetical on quiz

Back in June, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote to Howard University after it punished law professor Reginald Robinson for including on a quiz a question involving a client receiving a Brazilian wax. We reported in July that a tentative agreement between Robinson and the university had been reached. Unfortunately, that tentative agreement fell through, and the case remains unresolved, leaving Robinsonās and other Howard professorsā academic freedom and free speech rights at risk.
We wrote over the summer:
During a September 2015 class, a female student challenged a test questionās premise that a person could sleep through a Brazilian wax. After a complaint to administrators by two students and a 16-month investigation, Robinson was informed that one of the students allegedly believed the questionās premise somehow required her to reveal to the class whether sheād had a Brazilian wax. This dubious assertion, coupled with the use of the word āgenitalsā in the law school test question, contributed to then-Deputy Title IX Coordinator Candi Smileyās determination that Robinson is guilty of sexual harassment.
Although Howard is a private institution and thus not bound by the First Amendment, the university its students and faculty members free speech and academic freedom rights. These sanctions run counter to Howardās own , which states that faculty members are āentitled to freedom in the classroom in discussing their subjects.ā
As Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS explained in our letter, Robinsonās quiz question does not fall within Howardās definition of āsexual harassmentā according to its written policies. Additionally, law professors simply cannot teach their subjects if they may be punished for covering topics that make students uncomfortable. It is inevitable that when discussing torts and crimes ā particularly those involving someoneās body ā real life cases and hypothetical questions will be unpleasant to think about. But to omit all of these uncomfortable conversations would be to give Howardās law students an incomplete legal education and leave them ill-prepared to practice law in the real world.
It shouldnāt have taken Howard long to conclude that Robinsonās quiz question was protected and not punishable under university policy. Unfortunately, the case proceeded quite differently:
After a 504-day investigation, administrators determined that Robinson would be required to undergo mandatory sensitivity training, prior administrative review of future test questions, and classroom observation. Robinson also received a stern warning that any further āviolationsā of the universityās Title IX policies may result in his termination.
In other words, Robinson could be fired simply for, again, trying to do his job of teaching students the law.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS has still not received a response to our June 16 letter. Accordingly, today we wrote Howard again to reiterate our concerns and renew our demand that the university honor the promises it has made to its faculty and rescind its punishment of Robinson, which is inconsistent with university policy.
Robinson is scheduled to return to teaching in the spring semester, and we sincerely hope that Howard sees the error of its ways and decides before then to abide by university policy and act according to common sense.
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS.

Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS Reacts -- Where does Harvard go from here? With Larry Summers
Podcast
2025 has not been kind to Harvard. To date, the Trump administration , demanding violations of free speech, academic freedom, and institutional autonomy in return for restoring the funding. In response, Harvard , raising First Amendment claims. ...

Why Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS is suing Secretary of State Rubio ā and what our critics get wrong about noncitizensā rights

