Last week we came to the section on academic freedom in my course on the law of higher education and I posed this hypothetical to the students: Suppose you were a member of a law firm or a mid-level executive in a corporation and you skipped meetings or came late, blew off assignments or altered them according to your whims, abused your colleagues and were habitually rude to clients. What would happen to you?
The chorus of answers cascaded immediately: “I’d be fired.” Now, I continued, imagine the same scenario and the same set of behaviors, but this time you’re a tenured professor in a North American university. What then?
I answered this one myself: “You’d be celebrated as a brave nonconformist, a tilter against orthodoxies, a pedagogical visionary and an exemplar of academic freedom.”
Since 2001 ........... Remade in June 2008 ........... Latest version since January 2022
Sunday, February 08, 2009
Stanley Fish on critical pedagogy and academic freedom
Stanley Fish starts his opinion piece with:
:-) There is more in his essay--read the entire piece, and you will lots to agree, and disagree, with.
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