About Critical Mass [dot] Writing [dot] Reviews [dot] Contact
« previous entry | return home | next entry »

February 19, 2004 [feather]
The student has no clothes

This one speaks for itself.


Mars Hill College has accepted the resignation of a longtime professor after he challenged students to disrobe in exchange for an A in his sociology class and one of them took him up on the offer.

College President Dan Lunsford said the professor didn't expect the student would actually take off his clothes during the class last Thursday evening. The instructor's offer was intended to illustrate cultural differences and that public nudity is unacceptable in American society, he said.

"He did not expect it to happen," Lunsford said. "The professor realized that this had gone much beyond what he ever anticipated, and he was shocked and dismayed."

Lunsford said he would not release the name of the professor or student because of privacy concerns. The student will not be punished, he said.

The incident has been the talk of the campus at this Madison County school affiliated with the Baptist Church. Senior Kat Marotta said it disturbed her.

"I feel a lot of the responsibility is on the professor in how he handles his classroom," she said. "I'm very disappointed.

"People were very upset about it. It's probably the juiciest thing that's ever come out of this campus."

But students such as senior Josh Dye do not believe it was that serious.

"As part of the classroom setting, I don't think it should have been done, but it really didn't affect me," he said.

Lunsford said the professor, who has been with the college for more than 25 years, acted professionally by resigning. He has tenure and is eligible for retirement benefits.

"The professor has requested to activate his retirement, and it has been accepted with my expression of appreciation of his service to the college in the past," he said. "I am concerned about the negative perception it may generate, and the professor was equally concerned in his conversation with me. However, it was a mistake."

The professor apologized in an e-mail to students in the class. Lunsford said the student will not be punished because the incident would not have occurred if the teacher hadn't issued the challenge. However, the student will not receive an A for accepting the offer, he said.

"In my view, in American society and in an academic environment, public nudity is not acceptable to illustrate a point," he said.


I've said it before, and I'll say it again: you can't make this stuff up.

Thanks, as ever, to Maurice Black for the link.

UPDATE: Since we are on the subject of who's misbehaving in class and who should take the fall for it, consider this UNC English professor's censorious and demeaning response to a student who spoke about homosexuality in a manner she deemed unacceptable. The good news is that she got called on it, has apologized, and won't be allowed to impose speech codes on her class in future.

AND ANOTHER: The UNC incident--which is an instance of that "liberal academic bias" that some say does not exist--has been picked up by the Raleigh News & Observer. Thanks to Fred Ray for the link.

posted on February 19, 2004 6:42 PM