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Tag: University of North Florida

  • University of North Florida secures $1M endowment to boost environmental science programs

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    The University of North Florida has received an endowment of over $1 million from the River Branch Foundation to support its Institute of Environmental Research and Education (IERE).

    The endowment will provide scholarships for students pursuing a degree in environmental sciences and support the enhancement of essential programming at IERE.

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    “This extraordinary gift from the River Branch Foundation opens doors for students who are passionate about environmental science and strengthens the long-term vitality of the IERE,” said Dr. Erin Largo-Wight, professor and IERE director.

    The River Branch Endowed Scholarship is the first scholarship specifically designated for students in the UNF environmental sciences bachelor’s degree program. It represents a meaningful investment in the next generation of environmental leaders.

    This gift builds on a longstanding partnership between the River Branch Foundation and UNF. In 2006, the Foundation provided a significant endowment that played a critical role in establishing IERE.

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    IERE has supported meaningful, community-focused research through projects such as the production and installation of Pervious Oyster Shell Habitat (POSH) units, which are helping to restore local shorelines, including at Matanzas, Kingsley Plantation, and Cumberland Island.

    Initially projected to enroll 40 students by the end of 2025, the program met that goal with its first cohort this spring and has since received more than 200 applications from current and incoming students.

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  • Safety concerns grow over e-bikes and scooters on UNF Campus ahead of safety meeting

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    With the growing popularity of electric scooters, e-bikes, and skateboards among students, safety is becoming a top priority at the University of North Florida.

    UNF students told Action News Jax that the speed of these devices on shared walkways is creating safety concerns — especially as pedestrians and fast-moving riders try to navigate the same space.

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    Students told us the concern comes from sharing the same walkways — while someone may be walking at 2 miles per hour, an electric skateboard or e-bike can reach speeds of up to 30 miles per hour.

    Some students said they’ve had close calls.

    “I think they go way too fast in between people,” said UNF student Thomas Quinlan.

    “They kind of annoy me because I almost got hit by them running on the bridge,” added student Kelly-Jane Adams.

    To address these concerns, representatives from UNF Police, AAA, and UF Health are holding a safety-focused news conference Thursday morning on campus. The goal: raise awareness and promote safer habits as part of AAA’s ongoing media tour.

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    Although there haven’t been any reported incidents on the UNF campus so far, university leaders said now is the best time to act.

    While there haven’t been any incidents on the UNF campus, school leaders say that’s exactly why now is the best time to educate students.

    The AAA initiative focuses on reducing crashes through education, improved infrastructure, and behavior changes — particularly as micromobility devices become more common among young adults for commuting.

    Many students said they support the effort.

    “If that keeps people from being injured, then that’s great,” said Quinlan.

    UNF students said educational meetings like this are needed.

    The safety event is scheduled for Thursday at 10 a.m. at the University of North Florida.

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  • A Florida Presidential Search Was Halted Because of ‘Anomalies.’ The Board Chair Says Nothing’s Amiss.

    A Florida Presidential Search Was Halted Because of ‘Anomalies.’ The Board Chair Says Nothing’s Amiss.

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    In a surprising move, Florida Atlantic University’s search for a new president was suspended last week just days after the institution announced its finalists. Ray Rodrigues, chancellor of the State University System of Florida, flagged concerns about the process, prompting FAU’s search firm to defend its practices and others to criticize the move as politically motivated.

    On Friday, Rodrigues called for the search to be suspended in light of alleged “anomalies.”

    For one, Rodrigues wrote in a letter to Brad Levine, chair of the university’s Board of Trustees, search committee members had been given a long list of candidates and asked to rank their top six preferences, which were then submitted to the search firm. The members’ selections “were not disclosed on the record,” Rodrigues wrote, “and there was no meaningful opportunity” for members to discuss candidates prior to the straw poll. Holding such a poll — one that is “tantamount to a written vote that is not disclosed” — may run afoul of Florida law, he wrote.

    Rodrigues also said at least one candidate reported being asked improper questions. The candidate was asked to complete a questionnaire “and answer if his sexual orientation was ‘queer’ and whether he was a ‘male or transgender male.’” A “separate and required survey” asked the candidate “if his gender was ‘male, female or other’ and what his ‘preferred pronouns were.’” Rodrigues said the inquiries are “wholly irrelevant, inappropriate, and potentially illegal,” citing language from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s website.

    “Members of the search committee were not informed that these questions were being asked of candidates,” Rodrigues wrote. “This raises an additional concern about whether the search firm withheld material information from the search committee.”

    The chancellor recommended the search be suspended so the Board of Governors’ staff can “obtain the facts around these concerns and other potential anomalies.”

    In response, Levine, who also leads FAU’s presidential-search committee, told Rodrigues it did not “authorize” AGB Search, the executive-search firm, to send that questionnaire. “We do not think that such a questionnaire is warranted for a State University search in Florida,” Levine wrote Saturday in a letter to the chancellor. However, Levine maintained that the search process “has complied with all legal requirements and been conducted in a proper manner. We are anxious to provide you information that may clarify any misconceptions and allow you to reach a similar conclusion.”

    Through a spokesperson, Roderick J. McDavis, managing principal of AGB Search, told The Chronicle in emails that the practices identified by Rodrigues are standard operating procedure.

    The questionnaire flagged by Rodrigues is a “general, routine survey that is used in all our executive searches,” McDavis wrote. It’s voluntary, and no candidate is penalized for not filling it out, he said. Rather, “it’s for AGB Search’s benefit to ensure that our efforts continue to attract qualified candidates from all walks of life for our clients. Demographic information collected in the survey is provided in the aggregate if the client requests it,” he wrote.

    He noted that the FAU search committee “was not aware of the survey questions and did not receive the collected demographic information, in aggregate form or otherwise.”

    He also said that no other clients have questioned the use of the questionnaire.

    The “separate and required survey” Rodrigues referenced is a form used by Mintz Global Screening, a background-check company, to request approval from semifinalists to perform such a check, McDavis said. “While the consent form is required, the section asking for personal pronouns is optional and is clearly labeled,” he wrote. “Both survey and consent form are common elements of executive searches and we have used them in our work across the country.”

    McDavis also said that conducting a straw poll is “another industry standard practice.” The results, “in aggregate form,” were presented to the search committee, he said. “At that point, no candidates were ‘eliminated’ from consideration. In our searches, search committees often do select candidates to interview who ranked lower than the top results in the straw poll. It serves as guide only.”

    In a letter sent to Rodrigues on Monday, Levine further defended the search process, offering specifics. The straw poll does not run afoul of Florida law and was “merely a tool that the committee used to expedite their conversation,” Levine wrote. In fact, at a meeting that was closed to the public but recorded, the Board of Governors’ representative on the presidential-search committee, Alan Levine, endorsed the idea, saying it’s “a best practice.” Alan Levine assured the committee, “This is exactly the right way to do it,” according to Brad Levine, the FAU board chair. (Alan Levine recently told the South Florida Sun Sentinel via text message that he has been “raising issues about straw polls and confidential voting during searches” since 2021, when he called for the presidential search at Florida State University to be paused.)

    Brad Levine told Rodrigues that more than 20 applicants had been identified by at least one committee member during the poll. At the next meeting, the consultant presented that list but emphasized that committee members were free to discuss any applicant.

    Levine also said the questionnaire is common in higher ed, a point he did not make in his Saturday letter when he wrote that such a survey is not “warranted” for a state university in Florida. “I am sure you are aware that such surveys are routinely administered to job applicants across industry, including at our state universities,” Levine wrote to Rodrigues on Monday. “Our consultant informs us that demographic surveys were sent to each applicant in the most recent presidential searches” at the University of Florida, Florida State, the University of South Florida, and the University of North Florida.

    Levine also said that AGB Search has no way to track who responds to the questionnaire and that there is no way for the firm to associate a submitted response with an individual applicant. “Individual responses are never seen by the search consultants who assist the universities,” he wrote. FAU never requested or received the anonymous responses, he said, “and thus they played no role in the search committee’s selection of the semifinalists and finalists.”

    He also said that the candidates’ responses to the background-check authorization form in which they can provide their preferred pronouns were never shared with FAU or the search committee, and therefore played no role in the committee’s decisions.

    “FAU is anxious to resume our search process,” Levine wrote. “… We therefore respectfully ask that you authorize us to resume our process as soon as possible.”

    Rodrigues’s recommendation that the search be suspended was issued just two days after FAU announced its finalists. They are Vice Adm. Sean Buck, superintendent of the United States Naval Academy, Michael Hartline, dean of the College of Business at Florida State University, and Jose Sartarelli, former chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.

    Noticeably absent from that list was Randy Fine, a Republican state representative who co-sponsored what became known as the Stop WOKE Act, a controversial bill that Gov. Ron DeSantis championed. Fine told the South Florida Sun Sentinel in March that the governor’s office had approached him about the FAU gig, and that he was considering it. A spokesperson for DeSantis said at the time, “We think he’d be a good candidate.”

    It’s unclear if Fine applied for the job. Last year, DeSantis signed a bill into law that shields the names of applicants for public-college presidencies except for top contenders. A legislative aide told The Chronicle that Fine is vacationing in Europe with his family and is not available for comment. (A state representative was among a group of “highly qualified” candidates, Florida Atlantic’s student news outlet reported in June.)

    Republican politicians have recently secured presidencies at three Florida institutions. Rodrigues himself held seats in the state’s House and Senate before ascending to the system chancellorship.

    Andrew Gothard, president of United Faculty of Florida, a faculty union with chapters across the state, said in a statement that Rodrigues is “grasping at any meager, partisan straw he can find in order to gin up false cause to undermine a search process that — up until now — has been both fair and collaborative.”

    “It is clear that the Chancellor only jumps when the Governor yanks his chain,” Gothard said, “not when laws are truly violated.” (Asked for comment, a system spokesperson said that Rodrigues’s letter “speaks for itself” and that the system does not comment on pending investigations.)

    The executive committee of Florida Atlantic’s faculty union has urged professors to write to the Board of Governors and tell them to “keep their hands off our search!” The suspension “smacks of political meddling and sour grapes,” the committee wrote on a public Google Doc.

    Florida Atlantic University “maintains that its search process complies with all legal requirements and has been conducted in a proper manner,” the university said in a statement.

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    Emma Pettit

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  • New and Proposed Laws in Florida and Texas Are Already Reshaping the College Classroom

    New and Proposed Laws in Florida and Texas Are Already Reshaping the College Classroom

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    Andrea Marquez teaches management in the business college of the University of Texas at San Antonio. She never thought of critical race theory as connected to her work in the classroom.

    But in the spring of 2022, Marquez, an assistant professor, realized that might not be how state lawmakers saw it. At a meeting in response to faculty members’ concerns about the lieutenant governor’s goal of ending tenure, she realized just how expansively and imprecisely politicians were applying the term “critical race theory.” “Oh, wow,” she thought, some of the topics she discusses in class “could potentially ruffle feathers if you wanted to interpret it through this ‘You’re teaching CRT’ lens.” The realization gave her pause.

    She thought about her sections of management strategy, a course required for most business majors. Marquez follows a case-study model, and she uses one case that concerns a Black entrepreneur in the legal-cannabis industry. The case includes a section about how he has tried to reverse one of the impacts of the war on drugs by fostering more opportunities in the industry for people of color.

    Marquez considered swapping out the case study. That’s not a simple switch, she says — her course includes just four of them, and together they must cover all the right material. She also thought it was important that the cases feature a diverse set of business leaders in terms of gender and race.

    She decided to keep the case in her course. This spring, she ended up describing her internal debate about it to her students, “just to maybe provoke a little thought about a slippery slope.”

    So, Marquez stuck to her guns. But her second-guessing reflects a shift happening at public colleges all over Texas and elsewhere. As a number of conservative state legislatures consider restrictions on teaching about race, some faculty members are increasingly nervous.

    Sowing confusion and fear among faculty members about what they can and cannot teach may be the underlying and main goal of the curricular legislation as a package.

    The Texas Senate passed a bill this spring that would prohibit professors from compelling or trying to compel students “to adopt a belief that any race, sex, or ethnicity or social, political, or religious belief is inherently superior to any other race, sex, ethnicity, or belief.” The Legislature adjourned before the House could take up the proposal, but it could be revived in a future session. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, recently signed into law a bill that prohibits general-education courses from being “based on theories that systemic racism, sexism, oppression, or privilege are inherent in the institutions of the United States,” among other things.

    Critics of these bills say that they are intentionally vague and misleading in order to encourage self-censorship and self-policing among professors and administrators.

    “Sowing confusion and fear among faculty members about what they can and cannot teach,” says the American Association of University Professors’ recently released preliminary report on academic freedom in Florida, “may be the underlying and main goal of the curricular legislation as a package.”

    The bills are also part of a broader array of legislation that has unnerved many professors. Lawmakers’ concurrent efforts to end tenure and eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion — or DEI — programs have made it harder for faculty to believe that adhering to the letter of the law will be enough to keep them out of trouble.

    That’s left many feeling vulnerable and worried. When The Chronicle asked instructors to share their experiences in an online form, some were uncomfortable speaking about the situation, or would do so only if they were not named. Most instructors don’t have tenure, and some face additional scrutiny because of their gender identity, their race, or the courses they teach. Many of the professors who did talk shared stories of colleagues self-censoring or otherwise getting the message they should pre-emptively change their teaching if it touched on race. University leaders in states where lawmakers have challenged DEI programs and tenure, meanwhile, have been largely silent. For professors trying to figure out what, if anything, to do at this intense and uncertain moment, it can be difficult to know where to turn for guidance.

    One of the people trying to help professors navigate the confusion is Nicholas R. Seabrook, chair of the political-science department at the University of North Florida and a public critic of DeSantis’s higher-education policies. “A lot of these bills have been phrased in a way that’s purposefully vague,” Seabrook says. “It places faculty in a tough position, where you have this kind of broad, sweeping language without a lot of specifics.” Those specifics, he adds, are likely to become clearer with time and through legal challenges.

    Adding to the swirl of uncertainty in Florida is the Individual Freedom Act, also known as the Stop WOKE Act, which sets forth strict limits on what professors can say about race in the classroom. DeSantis signed the act into law in 2022, but it remains blocked from enforcement in public higher education after a federal judge declared it “positively dystopian.”

    DeSantis in 2021 signed a law allowing students to record classroom lectures as evidence of faculty members’ political bias, and a second law signed in April establishes a post-tenure review process in Florida. It all amounts, Seabrook says, to a climate of “hostility” toward higher education in his state — one that’s led faculty members to continually question whether they’re abiding by the law.

    Seabrook says he’s told faculty members in his department that they shouldn’t fear breaking the law when they teach. “These bills seem to be taking on a caricature,” he says, of liberal professors indoctrinating students. “If you’re not doing that, if you’re teaching these concepts in a way that is appropriate, you shouldn’t have anything to worry about.”

    You have academic freedom; it’s your right as a faculty member to teach your classes as you see fit based on your expertise.

    Yet Seabrook has witnessed a pre-emptive defense among his colleagues to what the AAUP has called a systematic effort by lawmakers “to dictate and enforce conformity” with their agenda. One professor came to Seabrook this past academic year, concerned that the phrase “critical race theory” appeared in her syllabus for a course outside of the general-education curriculum. The theory, which is rooted in legal scholarship and explores the effects of systemic racism, is a key part of the academic literature in that scholar’s area of expertise. She told Seabrook she felt she’d be doing her students a disservice if she did not expose them to it as one of multiple perspectives in the area. Did Seabrook think she should remove the phrase from the syllabus?

    He assured the faculty member that she would have his support as chair, and that he believed she would also have the university’s backing. “You have academic freedom; it’s your right as a faculty member to teach your classes as you see fit based on your expertise,” Seabrook says he counseled. But he also injected a note of caution: “You should exercise your best judgment in terms of how you should approach not just what’s in your syllabus, but also what you say in the classroom.”

    The faculty member tried to strike a balance: removing the syllabus reference to critical race theory, and continuing to discuss it in class, while also making it especially clear to students “that this was not being presented as something they had to believe, that they would not be required to say that critical race theory was accurate or was the only perspective that we can use to understand this,” according to Seabrook. Others in his department, he says, have been even less willing to talk in class about topics like critical race theory.

    Some faculty members who teach about race feel they’re under an extra layer of scrutiny. Among them is David A. Canton, an associate professor of history at the University of Florida and the director of its African American-studies program. “As a professor, you start doing double takes: Am I making sure that I’m showing students multiple perspectives?” Canton says.

    This fall, when he teaches his “Why Sports Matter” class, which focuses on race and politics in American sport, Canton won’t change any of his readings or assignments. He knows he incorporates differing viewpoints into his classes — students have said they don’t know where he stands politically. Still, he thinks, he can’t be too careful.

    Paul Ortiz has seen the same kind of self-policing that Seabrook describes, and borrows a phrase from political theory to describe it: “anticipatory obedience.”

    “The state doesn’t even have to ban anything, frankly, because people are afraid and they’re not going to step out of line because they’re afraid of the consequences,” he says.

    Some department chairs in Florida, he says, have told their faculty members not to assign anything with the word “race” in the syllabus. Those instructors then seek help from Ortiz, a professor of history at the University of Florida and immediate past president of the flagship’s chapter of the statewide union.

    The state doesn’t even have to ban anything, frankly, because people are afraid and they’re not going to step out of line.

    In cases like those, Ortiz tries to remind the chairs of their union-protected right to academic freedom, a right he says generations of academics fought for today’s scholars to exercise. “The union,” he says, “is one of the last lines of defense against the rise of fascism.”

    A Black STEM professor at a public university in Florida says he doesn’t think the law will affect his work; he sees his teaching and scholarship as defensible and grounded in data. Still, he asked not to be named for fear of professional repercussions. The professor says he’s observed a lot of “self-censorship” among his colleagues. He’s known professors who have, for instance, decided to remove discussion of the discriminatory practice of redlining from their syllabus or make readings about it optional. “People who don’t want to have a spotlight on their classroom, or a spotlight on the kinds of things that they talk about and teach, they just avoid all of that,” he says. “If you just want to avoid controversy, you say, ‘You know what? I’m just going to go back to the textbook and use the slides that the publisher sent, and everything will be fine.’”

    Sarah L. Eddy worries that the barrage of bills aimed at higher ed could cause professors to shift not only what they teach, but how — by frightening them away from using teaching strategies that are designed to combat inequities. Eddy, an associate professor in the biology department and the STEM Transformation Institute at Florida International University, studies inclusive teaching approaches in STEM: methods like adding structure to a course, including content that affirms the identities of marginalized students in STEM, or using an exercise where students choose values they care about from a list and write about their importance, which can help reduce stereotype threat. Evidence suggests such practices benefit students, especially those from underrepresented groups, and more STEM professors have recently begun adopting them. But Eddy fears that trend may reverse.

    STEM professors new to inclusive teaching may feel it’s risky, Eddy says. Add in the confusion over what is even within and outside the bounds of new legislation, they say, and the easiest move is to “pull back.”

    The laws — or even the possibility of them — also pose a professional threat. Eddy, who is nonbinary and queer, is leaving FIU for a new job at the University of Minnesota, a plan they put in motion because of the so-called Don’t Say Gay legislation, which DeSantis signed in March 2022. The law affects them both personally and in their research, which includes work on how sex and gender are taught in biology.

    I don’t know what types of activities I might be asked to stop doing. It’s heartbreaking and terrifying.

    Kerry Sinanan, an assistant professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio, is leaving her institution — and the country — partly as a result of recent legislation. “Texas has made it impossible for scholars like me to stay,” says Sinanan, a scholar of trans-Atlantic slavery who was raised in Trinidad and is of East Indian heritage. She was on track to apply for tenure this fall, but wasn’t sure whether she’d be approved in the current political climate, or what restrictions she might face in her scholarship. “I don’t know what types of activities I might be asked to stop doing,” Sinanan says. “It’s heartbreaking and terrifying.”

    So Sinanan, who holds Canadian citizenship, will join the University of Winnipeg this fall as an assistant professor. Before she does, though, she’s teaching a summer course at San Antonio in trans-Atlantic literature. And she won’t be changing a thing. That’s because she doesn’t believe that making concessions would ensure her safety. “Anybody who thinks that they can modify what they’re doing and be safe is deeply mistaken, because authoritarianism is never about creating conditions for anybody to be safe,” she says. “It’s about making everybody feel insecure.”

    Despite the risks, some professors are determined to stay the course. Shanna L. Peeples teaches doctoral candidates in education, primarily teachers and administrators in K-12 school districts, at West Texas A&M University. She had a singular mind-set in teaching her “Race, Equity, and Leadership in Rural Schools” course this spring: “If this is the last time I teach this, I’m going to make sure that I absolutely bring my best.” For her, that meant equipping her students — many of whom were dealing with resistance from parents and community members in their districts — with tools to have a “productive, good-faith conversation about equity.”

    In her own classroom, Peeples prioritized dialogue, too. “Listening to student voice is key, because then it isn’t on you to bring it up,” she says of discussing controversial subjects. “It’s only on you to make a space for it and hold that space.”

    Sharon D. Wright Austin, a professor of political science at the University of Florida, will begin teaching a course days after the new Florida law goes into effect July 1.

    “The Politics of Race at UF,” which she’ll teach during an online six-week summer session, fulfills diversity- and writing-related requirements that are part of the university’s general-education program. Wright Austin created the course and taught it for the first time in the fall of 2021; this will be her fourth time teaching it. But she said she and her colleagues have yet to get an explanation of which courses violate the law, or whether courses, like hers, that fulfill university-level general-education requirements instead of those for the statewide core will be subject to the state law.

    Several readings in the class focus on critical race theory and intersectionality, and Wright Austin teaches about campus incidents that have affected Black, Asian American, and Hispanic/Latino students at Florida. “That is definitely something in which I could possibly be breaking the law,” Wright Austin says. “I don’t know if I am or not, but I’m not changing my class, because I don’t think that I should have to.”

    Wright Austin is sticking with the syllabus. Her students will watch a recorded lecture about free-speech and political-correctness controversies on campus, then read summaries of Senate Bill 266, which DeSantis signed in May, and the Stop WOKE Act. They’ll be asked to write a one-page response to a prompt asking whether the two laws are “necessary to prevent the ‘indoctrination’ of college students,” and then respond to two of their peers’ posts on a class discussion board.

    As a tenured professor, Wright Austin, who is Black, feels an obligation to teach about race. “For someone with my particular background, who grew up in the South with the kind of environment that I grew up in and that my parents grew up in,” she says, “I would feel like I’m selling out my community if I didn’t talk about race.”

    How Wright Austin can and can’t talk about race remains to be seen: Even in Florida, where the target on diversity, equity, and inclusion-related work has been codified into law, there are multiple levels of interpretation — and possibly, of enforcement — between the precise wording of the law and how it plays out in a university classroom.

    But the timing of the new law that strips DEI funding and restricts how race is taught in general education underscores that this conservative vision of academe is unlikely to be abandoned anytime soon: A week after signing it, DeSantis announced he was running for president.

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    Megan Zahneis and Beckie Supiano

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  • A Florida University Is Quickly Assembling a List of Courses on Diversity. Why? DeSantis Asked.

    A Florida University Is Quickly Assembling a List of Courses on Diversity. Why? DeSantis Asked.

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    At least one Florida university has been asked to report its “expenditure of state resources” on programs and courses related to critical race theory and to diversity, equity, and inclusion, at the behest of Ron DeSantis, Florida’s Republican governor, according to an email obtained by The Chronicle. The move is likely to heighten fears among advocates of academic freedom in the state who worry that DeSantis is bent on curtailing professors’ speech in the classroom.

    On December 29, Karen S. Cousins, the associate vice president of strategy and implementation in the provost’s office at the University of North Florida, emailed UNF deans with the subject line: “URGENT / New requirement from the Governor.” That same day, Cousins wrote, Moez Limayem, UNF’s president, had received an email from Ray Rodrigues, chancellor of the State University System of Florida. Rodrigues’s email included a memo from DeSantis’s executive office along with an “activity survey form.”

    Cousins seemed to quote from the memo, writing that it is “a request for information ‘regarding the expenditure of state resources on programs and initiatives related to diversity, equity and inclusion, and critical race theory within our state colleges and universities.’

    The request pertains to all programs and initiatives, including ‘academic instruction.’”

    Cousins requested that the deans communicate with their associate deans and department chairs to identify the courses within their colleges that “contain DEI and/or CRT components.” She instructed them to include the course name and number, the number of credit hours, and the instructor of record and that person’s rank, along with other information. (She noted that the instructor’s name would not be included on the survey form.)

    “We’re truly sorry to share this with you during Winter Break,” Cousins wrote. “However, as you know, UNF’s timely compliance is not optional.” UNF’s deadline to provide this information to the chancellor is January 10, she wrote.

    Neither Cousins nor spokespersons at the University of North Florida responded to Tuesday evening emails from The Chronicle.

    DeSantis’s memo comes at a politically tense time in Florida higher ed, as many professors view the governor as a hostile figure who is invested in restricting their ability to teach freely. Like other Republican politicians, DeSantis has railed against critical race theory, which he has called “crap,” and against supposed leftist indoctrination in education. He championed the “Stop WOKE Act,” which aims to restrict how certain topics related to race can be taught. He branded the legislation in the news release as the strongest of its kind in the nation and said, “We won’t allow Florida tax dollars to be spent teaching kids to hate our country or to hate each other.” (A federal judge in November blocked the public college system from enforcing the law.)

    A Tuesday evening email to a DeSantis spokesperson was not returned. Beginning his second term as governor, DeSantis in his inaugural address Tuesday pledged to “ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology.”

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    Emma Pettit

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