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On Marquette Classroom Controversy, Rebuttal Ignores Facts

On his philosophy news site Daily Nous, University of South Carolina associate professor today to a blog post I wrote about hostility towards certain viewpoints at Marquette University. In his post, Weinberg argued that graduate student Cheryl Abbate was the ātarget of a political attackā by one of her students and that she was simply abiding by Marquetteās harassment policy, not censoring student speech, when she told him certain viewpoints werenāt welcome. Weinbergās reasoning is flawed on several levels.
To review: A student in Abbateās ethics class objected to her allegedly stating that āeverybody agreesā on the issue of gay rights, so āthere is no need to discuss it.ā After class, he approached her and recorded a conversation with her in which she defended the exclusion of particular viewpoints from the classroom because they might āoffendā students.
Weinberg argues that Abbate was simply controlling the scope of the classroom discussion, as all instructors must do. He writes that during the next class after the recorded incident, Abbate ānoted that class time is limited.ā Yet, in the recorded conversation, Abbate repeatedly cites the offensiveness of certain types of statements in declaring them ānot appropriateā for the classroom. Here is a partial transcript of the studentās recording:
Student: Regardless of why Iām against gay marriage, itās still wrong for the teacher of a class to completely discredit one personās opinion when they may have different opinions.
Abbate: Okay, there are some opinions that are not appropriate, that are harmful, such as racist opinions, sexist opinions. And quite honestly, do you know if anyone in your class, in your class is homosexual? And do you not think that it would be offensive to them if you were to raise your hand and challenge this?
Student: If I choose to challenge that, thatās my right as an American citizen.
Abbate: Well, actually, you donāt have a right in this class, as the, especially as an ethics professor, to make homophobic comments, or racist comments, sexist...
(At this point, the student interrupted Abbate and the conversation shifted direction.)
The fact that Abbate cited limited time as her reason for shutting the discussion down on the second day does not negate her plainly communicated intention to keep certain opinions out of the classroom.
Weinberg next asserts that Abbate was right in being concerned about students taking offense to a student voicing his or her opposition to gay rights, because as an instructor, Abbate is ārequired to be in compliance with the universityās .ā
But no harassment policy should be so broad as to render speech causing mere offense punishable. The Department of Educationās Office for Civil Rights, the federal agency that enforces the anti-discrimination laws with which Marquette must comply as a condition of accepting federal funds, has that āthe offensiveness of a particular expression, standing alone, is not a legally sufficient basisā to render it punishable under the law. Instead, āharassment must be sufficiently serious (i.e., severe, persistent or pervasive) as to limit or deny a studentās ability to participate in or benefit from an educational program.ā In other words, āto be prohibited by the statutes within OCRās jurisdiction, [harassment] must include something beyond the mere expression of views, words, symbols or thoughts that some person finds offensive.ā So Weinbergās contentionāthat by shutting down certain viewpoints to preemptively prevent a student being offended, Abbate was only doing her jobārelies on a depressingly broad but tragically common misreading of what is and isnāt harassment in the educational context.
Whatās more, Marquetteās harassment policy is inconsistent with Marquetteās stated commitment to free inquiry (which I cited in my previous post) and with common sense. The alarmingly broad policy prohibits, among other things, āverbal ⦠conductā (i.e., speech) including āa single incidentā when it is āintimidating, hostile or demeaning or could or does result in mental, emotional or physical discomfort, embarrassment, ridicule or harm.ā
Under this policy, if one simply says something to another student that could result in emotional discomfort or embarrassment (regardless of whether it in fact does), then one is guilty of harassment. This could easily include a statement from a professor to a student that the studentās sincerely held beliefs are āinappropriate,ā āharmful,ā āracist,ā or āsexist.ā To be clear: By this definition, Abbate has already harassed the complaining student. And the policy certainly covers innumerable instances in which students or professors challenge each othersā beliefsāinteraction that is at the heart of a meaningful college education.
Despite claims to the contrary, Abbate advocated for the exclusion from the classroom of viewpoints she finds āoffensive.ā To defend this goal by citing a policy so broad it could be used to shut down nearly any discussion of any importance is to provide no defense at all.
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