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Lincoln U. Ends Obesity Rule

December 7, 2009

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For the past few weeks, "Fitness for Life" may well have been the most discussed college course around. From now on, however, no one at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania will be required to take it.

The course became famous because of a requirement adopted at Lincoln for classes that entered in 2006 or later: that any students with body mass index scores above 30 show that they have lost weight or taken the course by the time they graduate. This year's seniors were the first to be covered by the requirement, attracting publicity that set off a national debate and Friday's faculty vote. At that meeting, faculty voted on a policy that will encourage students who are obese to take the course, but to end the stipulation that these students enroll in the class as a graduation requirement if they don't lose weight.

Ivory V. Nelson, president of Lincoln, said in an interview Saturday that the faculty "wanted to keep what we were doing, but wanted to send a message that we were not singling out any group." Nelson said he believes Lincoln is correct to try to identify students whose obesity may be dangerous, and to encourage them to learn more about nutrition and health. "We haven't stopped what we were doing," he said. The changes are to address "a perception" that the university was unfairly focusing on some students.

Over the past two weeks, Nelson said, he has received many calls from other colleges seeking information about how to set up programs to help obese students. "The discussion over the last two weeks has been a great one in the sense that we brought attention to the matter," he said. And regardless of whether the course should be required, "at the end of the day, the issue is still there."

Some critics of the policy questioned whether Lincoln might be breaking the law by requiring some students -- based on health conditions -- to take a specific course. But Nelson said that legal considerations did not come into play. "The jury is still out" on whether the requirement was legal, he said. "We weren't addressing the legal issue."

Obesity is a serious problem in the United States generally, and on many campuses. Many colleges have adopted policies or programs to encourage healthy diets, but most of these programs focus on such issues as the food served on campus, and Lincoln is believed to be the only university that had a specific course requirement for students with certain body mass index levels.

While Nelson said he was happy to have had Lincoln set off the debate over what colleges should do about obesity, many faculty members, students and alumni have been less than pleased with the attention. Lincoln, founded in 1854, was the first historically black college created in the United States (Cheyney University is older, but wasn't founded as a college). Lincoln's alumni include Thurgood Marshall and Langston Hughes -- and many supporters of the university were distressed to find the institution becoming known for having what many came to call "the fat class."

The Philadelphia Daily News on Friday quoted a faculty member as saying "the school is becoming the laughingstock of the whole world," and cited an e-mail sent by another faculty member to colleagues, saying: "Health is definitely important but should Anglo-European images of weight and body mass be imprinted on the minds of the young people who are our students?"

James L. DeBoy, chair of Lincoln’s health, physical education and recreation department, has been the most public proponent of the requirement. Prior to the faculty vote, he distributed a memo to his colleagues, urging them to "stay the course" and keep the requirement. DeBoy noted that his colleagues had been receiving and reading "acerbic" commentary on the requirement, but urged them not to dwell on such criticism.

"As educators we must be honest with our students and inform them when behavior, attitude, knowledge bases, or habits of mind are not what we, the faculty, deem as acceptable," he wrote. "Any factor/ trait/ characteristic that we believe will hinder students’ maximum development and full realization of life goals must be: (1) brought to their attention; (2) substantiated as being detrimental; and (3) adequately redressed. Such feedback will, at times, be unsettling, awkward, and distressing to students and faculty alike. By all means, these messages must be delivered in a caring, sensitive, nurturing way. In our heart of hearts we know that obesity robs individuals of both quality and quantity of life. We inflict greater injustice on our students today and in the years to come when we know what we ought to do but are hesitant to do so because of short-term adverse effects."

After the faculty vote, DeBoy said via e-mail to Inside Higher Ed that he was not distressed because of the continued commitment to the course and to raising the issues involved. "While the method may have changed, the learner outcome has remained constant: empower students with the requisite knowledge, skills, attitudes, and habits of mind to reduce/eliminate the ravaging effects of hypokinetic disease and their associated threats to both quality and quantity of life," he said. "We are not married to any particular method that accomplishes this end result … as long as that method delivers the targeted outcome in a manner that best serves the student."

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Comments on Lincoln U. Ends Obesity Rule

  • Too Bad a Compromise could not be reached
  • Posted by Belinda on December 7, 2009 at 10:15am EST
  • While I think the BMI as a "health" statistic is over-rated, I wish Lincoln would have found a compromise.

    Instead of just BMI, why not encourage students, faculty and staff to have health assessments? Not just BMI but Blood Pressure, Total Cholesteral, HDL and LDL levels as well. By providing students a more comprehensive evaluation, they would be better able to target responses to their issues through diet and exercise.

    Our company has started a program so we all know our "numbers". While my BMI is high, my other numbers are excellent. By knowing all the numbers I can focus on more exercise and fewer calories instead of worrying about implementing a cholesterol lowering diet. Conversely, one of my co-workers with a normal BMI has high cholesterol and is changing her diet to bring it down.

    I think Lincoln had the right idea. Educate their students of a known risk in their community then give them the tools to make changes. By singling out BMI it became a referendum on fat not health.

  • Posted by cb on December 7, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • "As educators we must be honest with our students and inform them when behavior, attitude, knowledge bases, or habits of mind are not what we, the faculty, deem as acceptable." That's outrageous. Apart from the fact that "we" educators are a diverse lot and cannot speak with one voice about what kinds of "behavior, attitude, knowledge bases, or habits of mind" are "acceptable," our job is to develop the capacity for independent thinking, not to impose standards of acceptability. This is one more example of college as re-education camp.

  • Obesity Course Requirement
  • Posted by Henry Silverman , Professor/Chairperson Emeritus at Michigan State University on December 7, 2009 at 2:30pm EST
  • Why not link salary raises for faculty and admidnistrators to an obesity or health
    requirement, along with one for students? That way everyone in the academic community benefits.

  • The Smoking Gun
  • Posted by Thesmokinggun , academic affairs at KSU on December 7, 2009 at 2:30pm EST
  • Good for the faculty senate, they showed leadership as well as compassion and respect for their students by eliminating a requirement that seemed to discriminate against overweight students.

    Why did we not REQUIRE students to enroll in courses when the healthcare issue dejour was SMOKING, AIDS, ALCOHOL and/OR DRUGS. These public health problems continue to exist and still cause disease and death everyday.

    Why are overweight student/people the only ones that we are "allowed" to discriminate again in the United States. What about their rights? We all know the insurance lobby is a strong one, could this be why? Other healthcare issues such as alcoholism lead to many of the same costs and often those costs involve entire families that experience domestic violence, depression families, heart disease or smoking at home where second hand smoke can effect entire families with respitory and heart disease and even cancer.

    You won't see lots of posts about this article because today, American's, especially younger American's, have been brainwashed by the media, fashion industry and the heath insurance cartel, to allow this obnoxious form of discrimination to be allowed.

    Why not make all the "couch potatoes" student take a course that requires regular exercise. That would include the majority of students, not just single the ones that do not approximate the physique of a Barbie or Ken doll.

    Let's teach all of our students about nutrition, exercise, and stress managemenr. This is truly a subject for lifelong learning.

    The Smoking Gun

  • fairness
  • Posted by R. Van Auker at California State University Sacramento on December 7, 2009 at 5:15pm EST
  • Why not require the course for all students (content to include nutrition/healthy lifestyle/fitness information & testing) but allow students to meet the requirement by passing a test of knowledge about nutrition & healthy lifestyle and a basic physical fitness test? Many people that appear overweight can be quite fit and conversely, some who do not appear overweight are not fit at all. That way, the school would be demonstrating the importance of health & fitness, but would not be singling out some students based on appearance.

  • Leave Students Alone
  • Posted by carolinem on December 8, 2009 at 7:45pm EST
  • The obsessive micromanaging of personal lives by the academic Left has reached new heights of insanity.  It is none of the administrators' business how much their students weigh, and herding them into re-education camps (classes) does nothing to stem their totalitarian reputations.  Under their logic, teachers and academic bureaurcrats also should be forced to attend those classes, since many of them obviously have spent too much time at desks and computer terminals and too little time in the physical education facilities.  I look forward to the day similar segregated classes are required for gays to educate them on the dangers of their lifestyle.