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First Amendment in the Classroom

December 16, 2009

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At a time when faculty groups are increasingly worried that a Supreme Court ruling is being used to limit the free speech rights of public college professors, a federal judge has declined a college's request to do just that.

The judge's ruling keeps alive First Amendment claims in a lawsuit by June Sheldon, who in 2007 lost an adjunct science teaching job (and the offer of courses to teach the following semester) at San Jose City College. Sheldon lost her job following a student complaint about comments she is alleged to have made during a class discussion of the "nature vs. nurture" debate with regard to why some people are gay.

Some students complained that her comments suggested that she did not believe anyone could be born a lesbian, and that the way she endorsed the "nurture" side of the debate was offensive. (While it is not disputed that there was a general discussion on this topic, there is considerable disagreement over exactly what was said, and this week's ruling does not resolve that matter.)

Sheldon sued the college in federal court, charging that her First Amendment and other rights were violated. Judge Ronald M. Whyte, while rejecting parts of the suit, turned down a request by the San Jose/Evergreen Community College District to dismiss the First Amendment claims. While Judge Whyte's ruling makes no determination on whether Sheldon's First Amendment rights were violated, the ruling states that she has First Amendment rights and doesn't lose them by virtue of the speech in question taking place while she was teaching at a public college.

The ruling stated that "the precise contours of the First Amendment's application in the context of a college professor's instructional speech are ill-defined and are not easily determined," and also noted that Sheldon could still be punished for what she said in the classroom if the college was acting under "legitimate pedagogical concerns." But the ruling rejected the community college district's attempt to apply the Supreme Court's 2006 ruling in Garcetti v. Ceballos to reject Sheldon's claims to having First Amendment rights for classroom speech.

In theory, many faculty leaders say, Garcetti never should even be a cause of concern when it comes to faculty members' rights. The Garcetti ruling came in a case involving the district attorney's office in Los Angeles and rolled back the First Amendment protections available to public employees in the context of their jobs. In the court's opinion in the case, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote explicitly that the factors in the case were different from those at play in higher education, and that the Supreme Court was not making a determination about these issues as they might play out in higher education.

"There is some argument that expression related to academic scholarship or classroom instruction implicates additional constitutional interests that are not fully accounted for by this court’s customary employee-speech jurisprudence. We need not, and for that reason do not, decide whether the analysis we conduct today would apply in the same manner to a case involving speech related to scholarship or teaching," Kennedy wrote.

At the time, advocates for faculty members said they couldn't agree more that academic employment is different from employment in the district attorney's office. But to faculty leaders' dismay, not all judges applying the Garcetti decision seem to have noted Justice Kennedy's comments about academe.

For example, there is the case of Juan Hong, a professor of chemical engineering at the University of California at Irvine, who maintains that he was unfairly denied a merit raise because comments he made in faculty meetings offended superiors. Some of those comments concerned personnel decisions. More generally, Hong said that his department was relying too much on part-time instructors to teach lower-division courses, and that students were entitled to full-time professors.

A federal district court dismissed the suit, saying that these discussions were part of the "official duties" of professors, and thus under the Garcetti decision were not entitled to First Amendment protection. The case is currently on appeal, but rulings such as that one led the American Association of University Professors to issue a report last month saying that Garcetti's inappropriate application was eroding academic freedom.

But in the Sheldon case, Judge Whyte rejected the college's attempt to cite Garcetti, writing that "Garcetti by its express terms does not address the context squarely presented here: the First Amendment's application to teaching-related speech" and saying that, as a result, the college district's "heavy reliance on Garcetti is misplaced." And without an impact from Garcetti, "the [U.S. Court of Appeals for the] Ninth Circuit has previously recognized that teachers have First Amendment rights regarding their classroom speech, albeit without defining the precise contours of those rights," the judge wrote, leaving it to trial to determine how these rights would be applied in this case.

Rachel Levinson, senior counsel for the AAUP, said she was "cautiously" pleased with the ruling in the Sheldon case, and that she couldn't be fully pleased while other rulings continue to apply Garcetti to higher education. She added, however that "I was very pleased that the court did recognize that the majority in Garcetti expressly reserved the issue of First Amendment protection for speech related to teaching, among other things. It’s heartening."

Lawyers for the San Jose/Evergreen district, which had tried to apply Garcetti to the Sheldon case, did not respond to a request for comment.

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Comments on First Amendment in the Classroom

  • Garcetti bears watching
  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee , Dir., at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on December 16, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • It is unfortunately predictable that college administrators would seize upon the Garcetti decision to justify their actions, and see in it more than there is, and that additional applications are inevitable.

    However, the abuse of power and retaliatory actions against faculty, especially when used against lower-status, and therefore more vulnerable adjuncts, will always be morally wrong.

    Furthermore, colleges and universities have yet to level the moral playing field regarding these stark inequities, either through grievance proceses for faculty, or some other accessible mechanism. As long as Garcetti stands, however, the temptation for the institutions may just bee too great.
    But the debate is muddied, I think, by invoking academic freedom. One is reminded of the immortal words of C. Wright Mills (1951: 151):
    "Yet the deepest problem of freedom for teachers is not the occasional ousting of a Professor, but a vague general fear -- sometimes called 'discretion' and 'good judgment' -- which leads to self-intimidation and finally becomes so habitual that the scholar is unaware of it. The real restraints are not so much external prohibitions as manipulative control of the insurgent by the agreements of ... gentlement."
    And so it would seem, not only in the present case, but in others were, as I said, the sense of moral fairness is entirely lacking, having been replaced by the need to "maintain control over the faculty" and adjuncts (as a recent ad for dean stated).

  • Posted by Adjunct George on December 16, 2009 at 11:15am EST
  • Tenured faculty control hiring, firing and raises. Guess what happens when an adjunct does not follow the party line? Pink slip time. The tenured faculty are primarily liberals. Guess what happens to the conservatives in the departments? I leave it to your imagination.

  • case law in the 4th circuit
  • Posted by bud levin , psychology at blue ridge community college on December 16, 2009 at 11:45am EST
  • http://www.law.emory.edu/4circuit/june2000/981481.p.html

    Among other things, the 4th circuit held that academic freedom belongs to faculty only to the extent that it is delegated by the institution, i.e., that faculty do not inherently possess academic freedom. This decision applies in the carolinas, virginia, west virginia and maryland.

  • Posted by marie on December 16, 2009 at 12:00pm EST
  • This applies to everyone. Firing tenured faculty for supposed "inappropriate comments" might be more difficult at institutions of higher ed with unions... but do not believe one minute that it cannot be done in another way. Denial of pay raises tied to merit, grant opportunities, teaching loads, assignments and schedules, official reprimands, denial of sabbaticals... are some of the devices in the arsenal of administrators who want to punish a faculty for shall I called it "being naughty"! In other words, creating a hostile environment in a subtle way can drive a worn-out tenured faculty to give up and resign or leave. That happens more often than you think!

  • Im-a-gin-a-tion
  • Posted by Diogenes on December 16, 2009 at 12:30pm EST
  • Why should we leave it to our imagination when we have yours George?

  • No academic freedom for most CC faculty
  • Posted by Hannah , Ex-Adjunked on December 16, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • True, tenured faculty who don't blend in with the "culture" of their department or college can 'revenge" exacted in unsatisfactory peer reviews, classes scheduled in tool huts, and phony derogatory letters inserted in their personnel files, leading to tries at actual discipline, including letters of reprimand (though this type of revenge is easily detectible, with a bit of probing). But no so-victimized tenured I've witnessed in my 15 years of adjuncting has ever ever resigned because of such "harrassement." Where else could they obtain a decently paying job (especially in this economy), with salary and benefits for life and job security a federal judge would envy? Good luck landing a permanent teaching job elsewhere.

    Many adjuncts, on the other hand, live in constant fear of saying anything that will send a student complaining to the department chair who has absolute power over whether the adjunct secures an abysmally paying class the next semester? If the chair happens to have integrity and a sense of decency, almost anything the adjunct does or says or assigns will be defended, with the compalning student laughed away. But if a new chair does not like you the same way the old one did, you won't even receive the courtesy of a pink slip (what with paper prices these days) or even an explanation of why you are not on next semester's class schedule.

    The price for keeping community college doors open amidst state budget crises is that the severely undercompensated adjuncts, whose backs districts balance their budgets on, cannot enjoy academic freedom supposedly embedded in definitions "higher education." Besides not saying or assigning anything "too" controversial, many adjuncts I've known give out all "A,s" so that an increasingly lazy and entitled student population will fill enough seats in their classes, ensuring that the class will not be cancelled due to low enrollment.

    Naitional unions, academic senates, and other faculty organizations wax gloriously philosophical (and earn money publishing lots of articles in e-mags such as IHE) about how "important" it is that ALL faculty enjoy academic freedom so that educational integrity can be preserved! Funny, though, how all that philosophical palaver never makes it into the adjunct's ability to truly educate their students.

  • Marie
  • Posted by DFS on December 16, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • What do I call what you have described?

    A job.

    Without the golden luxuries, though, unless you toe the "company line" so endorsed by Diogenes, the king of academic freedom.

    I'm sure that if anything has been "denied" it must past legalistic muster; else, we may read about it in venues like this?

    Long live Adjunct George!