College Media Network - Search the largest news resource for college students by college students Jobs and internships for students -

College Republicans to identify liberal professors

Published: Monday, August 31, 2009

Updated: Monday, August 31, 2009 03:08

UT College Republicans are compiling a list of liberal professors who they claimed have a bias against conservative students.

The list will include professors who students say have let their political views interfere with the way they interact with students in the classroom.

UT College Republicans President Matt Rubin, a junior majoring in political science and public administration, said the list is not an attempt to bash professors who have liberal ideas, but instead, it is an attempt to speak out for students who may have been victims of the bias, which was then reflected in their grade.

“We’ve been portrayed in the media, as well as comments from people in the community including College Democrats, saying that we’re creating a blacklist in order to smear the names of professors and that’s not true,” Rubin said. “We’re giving a voice to the students that have been harassed because of their political beliefs. It’s the same thing as bashing a student because they’re gay.”

Rubin said the list of liberal professors is important because of the many complaints he received from students at UT College Republicans meetings, concerning professors who made unnecessary political comments, including anti-Bush statements.

“At our weekly meeting, something we like to do is take time out for students to tell stories of any bias they have had in classes. What we’re doing is representing students who have had that experience. We’re trying to expose professors who have liberal bias and go against everything UT stands for,” Rubin said. “How is saying ‘President Bush is the dumbest president this country has ever had and should be hanged’ improving the human condition?”

The students who submitted and reported incidents such as these will remain anonymous, Rubin said.

“We had a student who said, in an ancient Greece class, Professor William O’Neal claimed that America did not liberate Europe in World War II. However; it was freed by Charles De Gaulle and the free French, not U.S. Soldiers,” Rubin said.

O’Neal, chair and professor of history at UT denied ever making the comment.

“To base this on the statement of a single student doesn’t seem as evidence to convict liberalism,” he said. “If you had a whole class come and say, ‘this guy is preaching his own gospel,’ that would be different, or if there was a substantial number of students from that class.”

Rubin said the list of dubbed liberal professors could also be beneficial to some students.

“We like to think of it as a liberal professor directory, not a list. Also, we’d like for it to be used as a resource for liberal students who are looking for like-minded professors that will positively affect their grade based on their bias,” he said.

Rubin added he and the UT College Republicans are not against professors who have liberal views.

“We realize that some professors are liberal, and that’s ok, it’s when they completely disregard a student’s opinion or they have a bias against them that might affect the way they are treated or graded, is what we think is wrong,” Rubin said.

O’Neal said although there may be some professors who let their political preferences affect the way they treat their students, it is not something he has witnessed as a common denominator at UT.

“We’re all human and there are some people who are totally committed to their own view points with very strong personalities, so I’m sure in our imperfect world this does exist,” he said. “But I do not know of anyone in this department who will base grades on hair color, eye color or political aspirations, and I have been the chair of the history department for three years and have been teaching here for 40 years.”

David Mann, a second year law student, said there are other important issues the College Republicans could be concerning themselves with.

“If I were a College Republican, I’d be spending my time trying to figure out why young people overwhelmingly support President Obama and the Democratic Party, and not waste it on this silly idea,” Mann said. “But if conservative students are afraid to defend their principles in the classroom, maybe they do need a list of professors to avoid.”

UT has an abundance of resources available to students to help them if they experience this sort of bias, O’Neal said.

“If the student feels abused, they should talk to their professor. If that doesn’t solve the problem, they should go to the department chair. If there is still a problem, they can even go to the dean or the Vice President [for] Student Affairs. There are so many places to go to avoid this type of thing,” he said.

Rubin said, though the directory of liberal professors is of high importance to the UT College Republicans, they have done many other positive things that people should focus on.

“We like to consider ourselves a well-rounded group. We’re not just a group of students sitting in a basement trying to slander these professors. We’re really doing a lot more this year. We’ve been helping out with several local campaigns and we also are having a school supply drive for students at Scott High School,” he said.

Rubin said the UT College Republicans are still working on compiling the directory of liberal professors, and expect it to be available on their Web site by Wednesday.

-The UT College Republicans Web site can be visited at www.utoledogop.com.

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

311 comments

Robert S
Wed Sep 2 2009 09:38
When I attended Brooklyn College, I wrote an article entitled "None Dare Call It Fascism" which soundly condemned liberal political correctness and the growing efforts to stifle anything perceived as "hate speech," which included religious individuals who opposed gay marriage, plus assorted boycotting efforts going on in NYC at the time that were in danger of shutting down a Korean family's grocery store because of nonsensical allegations of "racism" in the way the owner handled an out-of-control black patron. Of course, I was soundly condemned by the leftist academic thugs who were determined to smite anyone or anything perceived as right-of-center. But I thumbed my nose at them and continued my modest writing endeavours which I and my supporters considered more of a mix of common sense and libertarianism than anything Rush Limbaugh would readily embrace. My grades didn't suffer, however, and no professor ever told me to leave his or her class because he did not agree with my politics. Dirty looks were about as far as things went. But then, I was a grad student in English. Had I been studying Economics, as I was informed by another grad student in that area, my plight would have been hell on earth. I don't know how they would have dealt with my cousin, who earned her doctoral at OSU. She's now a pistol-packing lesbian math professor with solid fiscally conservative opinions, a staunch free-speech and second amendment advocate, a flag-waving patriot with deep religious convictions, and happily married to her lifemate, a staunch Obama-loving liberal. (A lesbian Carvell-Matlin relationship!) I guess the leftists at her campus are too terrified to say anything critical while she fires off witticisms like "After Boston went into terrorist panic mode over a few Lite-Brite ads for a dumb cartoon movie, I thank God that MIT is not a commuter college." Hooray for life's little ironies!
southern guy
Wed Sep 2 2009 08:34
It would be much easier to compile a list of conservative professors (it'll be much shorter!) and just do the math for the rest.
Dave
Wed Sep 2 2009 07:56
"David Mann, a second year law student, said there are other important issues the College Republicans could be concerning themselves with.

"“If I were a College Republican, I’d be spending my time trying to figure out why young people overwhelmingly support President Obama and the Democratic Party."

Yes, that would really help conservative students defend themselves from unfair professors!

" ... if conservative students are afraid to defend their principles in the classroom, maybe they do need a list of professors to avoid.”

Uh, perhaps a list of biased professors is a good first step in preparing to defend your principles. Forewarned is forearmed, no?

But then Mr. Mann's suggestions were just sour grapes from a typical leftist tool. (And he wants to be a lawyer! Typical. The Democrats are a party of lawyers.)

Jo
Wed Sep 2 2009 07:24
Guys, congrats! It’s a great idea to stop that Marxist madness in education. You pay your own money and you should not listen to what ruins the country and turns it into another socialist-communist grave of opportunities. Do you see how many hateful comments you’ve got? It’s a good sign. They are afraid of the fact that you’ve finally – finally! – decided to do what those haters of capitalism and free market have been doing for many years with their community organizers. You’re on the right track. Organize with passion and believe. Speak up!
Bill S
Wed Sep 2 2009 07:10
I can not understand why "Progressives" consider highly biased actions from the liberals to be acceptable behavior. However, when a conservative group attempts to publicize the blatant behavior, they are chastized. At the same time, these "Progressives" will be the first on the "Bash Conservatives Bandwagon". This is not progressive. Progressive action on the part of professors would be to insure the facts, not opinions, are taught. Let's go back to the good old concept of the three r's
Lady Day
Wed Sep 2 2009 00:12
As a progressive, I'm so glad that nonsense stories like this keep coming from the right. It makes it that much easier to identify what kind of fools are still embracing Republicanism: religious nuts, ignorant town hall screamers, self-centered greedy types, and pea brains who need to be spoon-fed their beliefs. Bravo, College Republicans! Way to show that conservative "values" rot the mind, even in a place of learning.
bvogon
Wed Sep 2 2009 00:04
Rah Rah, you college repubs! Next week we'll have a good ol' book burning in the quad?
George SchmittYour name
Wed Sep 2 2009 00:03
Nazi philosophy is government run by business. Communism is government run by the people. They are opposits. Communists are not Nazis. they are opposits. How can you call a person a Nazi and a Communist THEY ARE OPPOSITS. Understand, look in every library in the world and ask 90% of educated people and you come to the conclusion that the scientific method of discovery and proving what you claim to be true is the only way to real enlightenment.
joanna
Tue Sep 1 2009 23:02
“We had a student who said, in an ancient Greece class, Professor William O’Neal claimed that America did not liberate Europe in World War II. However; it was freed by Charles De Gaulle and the free French, not U.S. Soldiers,” Rubin said.

While I agree with George Jones that this statement is fishy, if true however, how does that make him liberal? He may be a francophile or giving a skewed view of history, or perhaps he is incompetent. How does one leap to liberal?

It is sad to think that even young republicans have nothing to offer but attacks on others as opposed to creating a better vision of this country. If it weren't for the harm, you have to feel sorry for people who see the world the way they do.

lexslamman
Tue Sep 1 2009 22:46
I don't see why Republicans, a largely ignorant, arrogant, self-centered and anti-intellectual political movement, even bother going to college in the first place.
Nickel
Tue Sep 1 2009 21:49
I remember lists from the 1950's. Senator McCarthy used them. They seemed to work pretty well. College Republicans, at long last, have you no sense of decency?
iHATESTOOPIDPEOPLE
Tue Sep 1 2009 20:54
FOR THE LAST TIME, UT IS THE UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTION ABOUT THAT LOOK AT THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE FREAKING PAGE! IT SAYS UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO RIGHT THERE! ARE YOU GUYS BLIND, OR STUPID????? OR JUST TRYING TO BE BLAME THE WRITER CAUSE YOU'RE TOO STUPID TO LOOK????????????
Erika in PA
Tue Sep 1 2009 20:42
Does being challenged by a professor on one's beliefs count as "abuse"? It sounds like the Young Republicans think so. Are they actually identifying discriminatory treatment or just critical debate that doesn't come out where they'd like it to?
Fair & Balanced
Tue Sep 1 2009 20:30
Compiling lists is a good thing, but in order to be fair and balanced then the list must include any professor with any political view point, who imposes it on the class. But even math classes are biased. Achmed and Jesus are good guys and Frank is spiteful and/or dumb, but Sally solves the problem. Maybe in history, poly-sci, and some English classes political opinion is relevant, but certainly not in math or science or art.

Part of the problem is that when I agree with someone then I do not think that they are biased. That is why liberals and condervatives each think that the media is biased against them. And part of the time, each is correct.

conservative_liberal
Tue Sep 1 2009 19:51
I just want to thank the anti Americans who are compiling this list. I will personally send an e-mail to every name on that list whether or not I have had them as a professor and tell them what a wonderful job they are doing. There may be liberal professors out there who are opinionated but I highly doubt you have to drag every liberal professors name through the mud. I hope that if any of you become professors and speak badly to a liberal student that the student will then drag your name through the mud. This is disgusting and uncalled for and to make things right you need to also include those names of conservative professors if you even want a fair standing at this university.
sdj
Tue Sep 1 2009 19:48
Perhaps the professors at UT confronted similar situations to those I have encountered teaching whenever I teach human evolution as a part of human development course. There have been several occasions when students with strong religious beliefs answer such a question as What is the definition of natural selection and how is supposed to operate? with an irrelevant response about their own beliefs about evolution, frequently supported by some text from the Discovery Institute website. Since the question simply asked for a definition and an answer about how it is claimed to operate, the student's personal beliefs were as irrelevant as my own. There is no recourse in such a situation, as I explained to one irate parent, than to give the student a poor grade for that question. After all, other students were not graded on their personal beliefs, but on their understanding of the material: the response, quite surprisingly, is that these people seem to believe that their beliefs are indeed relevant. Moreover, since
learning is the development of individual critical abilities, regurgitating something from some ideologically
comfortable website is not only plagiarism, but it defeats this basic purpose of learning. Students
penalized in this way have sometimes said nasty things behind my back. That's why whenever this has
happened I have kept both the examine and the student's irrelevant answer, so that it is trivial to show what actually transpired: there is the increasing threat of some disgruntled student making groundless claims. Of course, this never stops whisper campaigns with their ideologically-driven right or left wing politically correct agenda.
bookwarped
Tue Sep 1 2009 19:39
How about compiling a list of people with German surnames. They are probably Nazis.
Just Sayin
Tue Sep 1 2009 19:37
Compiling lists is just downright immature and silly. It leads to all sorts of bad things that can happen to innocent people whose comments were taken out of context by nuts flush with power. Of course, when liberals do it, that's okay because they are pure of heart, just darned smart and they only have our best interests at heart, just like when we were asked to do our patriotic duty and help the White House identify all those terrible, terrible lies that were being told about the great and wonderous things being done to ensure we would never go without healthcare. Flag@Whitehouse.gov anyone?
Lazlo de la Renta
Tue Sep 1 2009 19:30
It's a shame these students just don't have the guts to go to class armed and let the lecturer know they won't be tyrannized by marxist lunatics.
JMundy
Tue Sep 1 2009 18:45
Whether or not they admit it, many public universities express political bias. I ended up transferring from the University of Cincinnati to Ohio Universirty because Cinci was just too darn conservative. It probably worked out best for everyone involved.






log out