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Survey: What students think about expression, association, student fees, and Charlottesville
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30, 2019 鈥 A new report from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education finds a majority of college students value inclusivity over free speech, think their fellow students should have their political views censored if they are hurtful or offensive to certain students, and think that students should be excluded from extracurricular activities if they publicly express intolerant, hurtful, or offensive viewpoints.
贵滨搁贰鈥檚 latest survey, conducted by YouGov, gathered 2,225 student responses to a broad array of questions about civil rights and liberties on campus, including questions about free expression, funding for student groups, and free association. The survey is also the first to ask students about the 2017 white nationalist protests and counter-protests in Charlottesville, Va., and how these protests affected their views toward free expression and protest.
鈥淔IREoverwhelmingly support free speech rights as a general principle, but that support hollows out when they are asked more specific questions about those rights,鈥 said FIREDirector of Communications Nico Perrino. 鈥淭his is troubling because it suggests a surface-level understanding of the free speech protections that underlie the First Amendment and an unwillingness to see them applied to the protection of expression some find offensive or objectionable.鈥
Some of the report鈥檚 key findings related to expression and tolerance include:
- 60 percent of students think that promoting an inclusive environment that is welcoming to a diverse group of students should be a more important priority than protecting students鈥 free speech rights, including the right to voice hurtful or offensive speech.
- 57 percent think colleges and universities should be able to restrict student expression of political views that are hurtful or offensive to certain students.
- 70 percent think students should be excluded from extracurricular activities if they publicly express intolerant, hurtful, or offensive viewpoints.
- 55 percent think the climate on their campus makes it difficult for students to have conversations about important issues such as race, politics, and gender.
- Nevertheless, 96 percent think it is important that their civil rights or liberties are protected, and the largest proportion of students (30 percent) think that freedom of speech is the most important civil right or liberty.
Free association and student fees:
- 75 percent think students should be able to join single-gender groups not recognized by the university, and 34 percent think their college should be able to punish students who join these groups. These issues are the subject of controversy at Harvard University, which is denying certain benefits to students who join off-campus, unrecognized sororities, fraternities, or other single-gender organizations.
- 73 percent think registered student groups on campus should be able to deny leadership positions in the student group to students who don鈥檛 agree with the mission of the group. This issue was the subject of the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court case Christian Legal Society v. Martinez.
- Although 73 percent think student government should distribute student activity fees without regard to the mission of the student group, half think groups with missions that certain students find intolerant, hurtful, or offensive should not be able to register as student groups and receive student activity fees from student government.
Charlottesville:
- 35 percent responded that the white nationalist protests and counter-protests in Charlottesville, Va. in August 2017 changed how they think about speech and expression on campus.
- 52 percent think white nationalists should be allowed to protest peacefully, while 71 percent think those protesting against white nationalists should be allowed to protest peacefully.
This survey also revisited some questions from 贵滨搁贰鈥檚 2017 survey of student attitudes about free expression on campus. In 贵滨搁贰鈥檚 Speaking Freely survey, 58 percent of students strongly agreed or agreed that it is important to be part of a campus community where they are not exposed to intolerant and offensive ideas. In 2018, that support increased to 64 percent.
There were some notable differences in how Republican and Democratic students view expression. For example, Republican students were 14 percentage points more likely than their Democratic peers to think the climate on their campus makes it difficult for students to have conversations about important issues such as race, politics, and gender. However, FIREalso found that both Democratic students (30 percent) and Republican students (28 percent) think that freedom of speech is the most important civil right or liberty.
FIRE contracted with (California), a nonpartisan polling and research firm, to survey 2,225 American undergraduate students between Sept. 24 and Oct. 11, 2018. YouGov calculated weights for each response based on the respondent鈥檚 gender, race, age, education, and geographic region. A copy of the full report, an FAQ, and the toplines and tabulations from YouGov can be accessed here.
The survey project was made possible by a grant from the to conduct polling on campus attitudes, engage in legal and social science research, and mobilize a wider audience on and off campus in the fight for student and faculty rights.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of students and faculty members at America鈥檚 colleges and universities. These rights include freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience 鈥 the essential qualities of liberty.
CONTACT:
William Rickards, Communications Coordinator, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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