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Soka professor unjustly punished for 鈥榯riggering鈥 students with readings on 鈥榃riting the Body鈥 gets split decision from faculty committee of just two
Amid a last month over whether popular writing professor Aneil Rallin鈥檚 sex-related reading assignments were too 鈥渢riggering鈥 to teach, Soka University of America suggested its 鈥淔aculty Adjudication Committee鈥 would review the issue and reach a just result.
鈥淭he university relies on the determination and recommendations of the faculty in these cases,鈥 a Soka spokesperson told in May after FIREwarned the school not to punish Rallin for classroom instruction clearly protected by academic freedom. 鈥淲e will await the output of the faculty adjudication committee鈥檚 review and recommendations.鈥
But just two people on that committee showed up to vote. And they couldn鈥檛 agree.
By Soka鈥檚 own policies, there is nothing to investigate.
Now, in a clear affront to basic fairness, the tie-break goes back to Soka鈥檚 Interim Dean of Faculty, Michael Weiner, who first launched the investigation into Rallin鈥檚 course content. Weiner will make a recommendation to Soka鈥檚 president, who will have the final say.
Any neutral observer can see the lack of integrity in Soka鈥檚 play-acting at due process. While Rallin 鈥 a tenured three-time Soka 鈥淧rofessor of the Year鈥 (who uses they/them pronouns) 鈥 waits to hear their fate, it鈥檚 worth reflecting on why this farce never should have begun in the first place.
Soka investigates course content that 鈥榝ailed to create a safe space鈥
Rallin was first alerted in April that they were under investigation after students allegedly complained that some assignments for WRIT 305: 鈥淲riting the Body,鈥 were 鈥渢riggering鈥 and failed to create a 鈥渟afe space.鈥
Rallin鈥檚 assigned reading and viewing materials in a course on 鈥淲riting the Body鈥 allegedly made students feel 鈥渧iolated鈥 and were 鈥渄isturbing,鈥 鈥渢riggering鈥 and 鈥渧aguely pedophilic.鈥 But as FIREreminded Soka in a letter last month, all of Rallin鈥檚 course鈥檚 content 鈥 including pieces from widely read figures like Randa Jarrar, Samuel Delaney, Roxane Gay, and Isaac Baley 鈥 are protected by Soka鈥檚 very strong promises of academic freedom.
The two-member Faculty Adjudication Committee鈥檚 report, which focused on concerns about the Jarrar piece, resulted in one committee member finding Rallin 鈥溾嬧媑uilty of several of the causes for faculty dismissal鈥 including 鈥渁ctions and behavior that exhibit moral turpitude or gross indifference to the well-being of others.鈥 The faculty member also cited a student complaint that alleged Rallin had interfused personal values and beliefs with course instruction. The other member, however, concluded that Rallin鈥檚 teaching was protected, and that letters of support indicated Rallin provided uncomfortable students with alternative reading materials or 鈥渢rigger warnings鈥 before encountering the objectionable material.
FIRE once again calls on Soka to cease the investigation and publicly reaffirm its commitments to academic freedom.
鈥淎lthough there is much empathy for the three students who appear to have been offended or were upset at the material discussed during the teaching of the course, the allegations set forth by the Dean of Faculty are not supported by the evidence,鈥 that professor stated.
But with the committee of two in deadlock, that dean is now in charge of making the recommendation to Soka鈥檚 president on whether Rallin should be terminated.
And even though no faculty committee should be needed to determine whether professors like Rallin have the right to teach controversial topics (they very clearly do), should such a committee be formed, it must include more than two people.
While groups like the AAUP faculty adjudication committees without suggesting a certain number of members, it should go without saying that a sufficient, odd number of faculty representing a cross-section of university scholars must be included.
Close your eyes and pick a point on a map. Any school found there, whether public or private, big or small, likely has a large faculty adjudication committee to ensure a fair verdict is reached in faculty disciplinary cases. For example:
- LSU鈥檚 Faculty Adjudication Committee has .
- Stanford鈥檚 Academic Council Advisory Board: .
- University of Washington鈥檚 Faculty Adjudication Panel: a very robust .
You don鈥檛 need 21 professors on a panel to have a fair process, and having a large panel alone isn鈥檛 sufficient to guarantee one. But a panel of just two professors falls far short of what a fair faculty discipline committee should look like, given the high stakes, the chance of a split decision, as seen here, and an insufficient number of opinions to ensure the fairest possible outcome
The investigation into clearly protected teaching is unwarranted and improper
We鈥檇 be having a different conversation if both committee members had found in Rallin鈥檚 favor, or if, worse, both had found his punishment was warranted. But it鈥檚 a conversation we shouldn鈥檛 be having at all. Faculty adjudications are a necessary part of disciplinary processes where facts are in dispute, but here the facts are clear: By Soka鈥檚 own policies, there is nothing to investigate.
In 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 May 11 letter to the university, we explained that the strong academic freedom promises Soka makes to its faculty protect Rallin鈥檚 right to discuss pedagogically relevant material in class 鈥 even if some students find the material objectionable. Those promises include a statement in the faculty handbook that Soka places 鈥渟pecial emphasis鈥 on the 鈥渧alues which are essential to its nature as an academic community. Among these are freedom of speech and academic freedom.鈥
Soka鈥檚 president must stand by the university鈥檚 commitments of academic freedom by finding that Rallin鈥檚 use of pedagogically relevant classroom material was protected and violated no university policies.
Now, FIREonce again calls on Soka to cease the investigation and publicly reaffirm its commitments to academic freedom. The university cannot reconcile its investigation of Rallin鈥檚 pedagogically relevant course materials with its pledges to faculty to uphold 鈥渁 community ideally characterized by free expression, free inquiry, intellectual honesty, respect for the dignity of others and openness to constructive change,鈥 as the faculty handbook establishes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 sad that the Soka president has still not publicly said anything about this racist queerphobia and attack on academic freedom at Soka, despite so many students and colleagues beseeching him to call off this investigation and uphold academic freedom at Soka,鈥 Rallin said, adding that they would not be 鈥渟hamed into silence鈥 over the investigation.
What makes the situation even more suspicious was Rallin鈥檚 very recent criticism of the university in a co-authored in 2021 arguing that Soka failed to sufficiently support BIPOC students. The proximity of these two events raises concerns that the university is retaliating against Rallin for criticizing the institution.
Soka鈥檚 president must stand by the university鈥檚 commitments of academic freedom by finding that Rallin鈥檚 use of pedagogically relevant classroom material was protected and violated no university policies. To do otherwise would unacceptably chill the speech of academics interested in challenging students to engage with controversial, and sometimes offensive, material.
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