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October 30, 2007 [feather]
Incompetence

FIRE is focussing on the University of Delaware, which subjects the students living in on-campus housing to what sounds like a relentless and intrusive campaign to compel them not only to expose their private beliefs and preferences, but also to conform them to institutional ideological norms.


University of Delaware Requires Students to Undergo Ideological Reeducation

NEWARK, Del., October 30, 2007--The University of Delaware subjects students in its residence halls to a shocking program of ideological reeducation that is referred to in the university's own materials as a "treatment" for students' incorrect attitudes and beliefs. The Orwellian program requires the approximately 7,000 students in Delaware's residence halls to adopt highly specific university-approved views on issues ranging from politics to race, sexuality, sociology, moral philosophy, and environmentalism. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is calling for the total dismantling of the program, which is a flagrant violation of students' rights to freedom of conscience and freedom from compelled speech.

"The University of Delaware's residence life education program is a grave intrusion into students' private beliefs," FIRE President Greg Lukianoff said. "The university has decided that it is not enough to expose its students to the values it considers important; instead, it must coerce its students into accepting those values as their own. At a public university like Delaware, this is both unconscionable and unconstitutional."

The university's views are forced on students through a comprehensive manipulation of the residence hall environment, from mandatory training sessions to "sustainability" door decorations. Students living in the university's eight housing complexes are required to attend training sessions, floor meetings, and one-on-one meetings with their Resident Assistants (RAs). The RAs who facilitate these meetings have received their own intensive training from the university, including a "diversity facilitation training" session at which RAs were taught, among other things, that "[a] racist is one who is both privileged and socialized on the basis of race by a white supremacist (racist) system. The term applies to all white people (i.e., people of European descent) living in the United States, regardless of class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality."

The university suggests that at one-on-one sessions with students, RAs should ask intrusive personal questions such as "When did you discover your sexual identity?" Students who express discomfort with this type of questioning often meet with disapproval from their RAs, who write reports on these one-on-one sessions and deliver these reports to their superiors. One student identified in a write-up as an RA's "worst" one-on-one session was a young woman who stated that she was tired of having "diversity shoved down her throat."

According to the program's materials, the goal of the residence life education program is for students in the university's residence halls to achieve certain "competencies" that the university has decreed its students must develop in order to achieve the overall educational goal of "citizenship." These competencies include: "Students will recognize that systemic oppression exists in our society," "Students will recognize the benefits of dismantling systems of oppression," and "Students will be able to utilize their knowledge of sustainability to change their daily habits and consumer mentality."

At various points in the program, students are also pressured or even required to take actions that outwardly indicate their agreement with the university’s ideology, regardless of their personal beliefs. Such actions include displaying specific door decorations, committing to reduce their ecological footprint by at least 20%, taking action by advocating for an "oppressed" social group, and taking action by advocating for a "sustainable world."

In the Office of Residence Life's internal materials, these programs are described using the harrowing language of ideological reeducation. In documents relating to the assessment of student learning, for example, the residence hall lesson plans are referred to as "treatments."

In a letter sent yesterday to University of Delaware President Patrick Harker, FIRE pointed out the stark contradiction between the residence life education program and the values of a free society. FIRE's letter to President Harker also underscored the University of Delaware’s legal obligation to abide by the First Amendment. FIRE reminded Harker of the Supreme Court's decision in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), a case decided during World War II that remains the law of the land. Justice Robert H. Jackson, writing for the Court, declared, "If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein."

"The fact that the university views its students as patients in need of treatment for some sort of moral sickness betrays a total lack of respect not only for students' basic rights, but for students themselves," Lukianoff said. "The University of Delaware has both a legal and a moral obligation to immediately dismantle this program, and FIRE will not rest until it has."


Note how the concept of "competence" is used to license attempts to press students into accepting the views, and the prying, of the school; note, too, how the school is using students (in the form of residential advisors) to push its agenda as well as to report on students who don't buy in. Note also how the environment has joined the list of categories about which the university wishes to regulate students' views (that one has been brewing for some time--I think of it as the stealth PC category).

So what should the good president of U Delaware do? He can't defend this. But his "competency" will be compromised if he claims he knew nothing about it. Should he find himself a nice scapegoat to fire? How can he make reparation (a word the folks at fault here will know well) to the students and families whose rights and trust he has allowed his school to violate?

Comments are welcome. Please type away after your waves of disgust diminish.

posted on October 30, 2007 11:48 AM




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Comments:

I don't know that my waves of disgust will ever diminish.

To be white is to be a racist. As a white person, I guess I should just go and kill myself.

Posted by: Laura(southernxyl) at October 30, 2007 7:11 PM



Would this be the same University of Delaware that asked a panelist to step down because he had served in the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank...and another panelist had said he might not be "comfortable" with that?

Posted by: david foster at October 30, 2007 10:55 PM



The policy is too awful to read; it makes one sick. Laura is right: what options does a white person have?

Posted by: Al at October 31, 2007 11:18 AM



I would _love_ for someone to show damages as result of treatment that they sustained when going through this. Can you imagine if someone appeared who was penalized in housing assignments (i.e. denied legitimate first opportunities to register) as a result of 'insufficient commitment to diversity."

Posted by: Armitage at October 31, 2007 12:23 PM



None of these FIRE press releases seem to quote students. Are there actual students speaking up about this issue? I would love to see specific stories.

Posted by: Justin at October 31, 2007 10:27 PM



We're speaking up. Watch Hannity and Colmes tonight, November 1 at 9 PM EST on Fox News.

Posted by: UD Student at November 1, 2007 3:44 PM





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