The Jerusalem Post

The ADL’s new ‘report card’ for campus antisemiti­sm gets an F from Hillel and some Jewish students

- • By ANDREW LAPIN/JTA

Some Jewish students would like to see the Anti-Defamation League after class. Last week the antisemiti­sm watchdog organizati­on unveiled its Campus Antisemiti­sm Report Card, a series of letter grades assigned to 85 colleges and universiti­es based on how well the group believes they are addressing antisemiti­sm. For many elite schools, the results were not good.

Only two schools – Brandeis, which was founded by Jews, and Elon – earned an “A.” Many others fared quite poorly, with Harvard, Stanford, Princeton, and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology among the 13 “F” grades. Another 24 came away with “D”s, from Columbia and Barnard to Northweste­rn, Rutgers, and Ohio State.

“Parents and students and other folks are used to seeing college grades and guides and rankings,” Shira Goodman, the ADL’s senior director of advocacy, said. She compared the report cards to the influentia­l national college rankings by US News and World Report.

“It is recognizab­le, it’s easily understand­able,” Goodman said. “And we needed a way to distinguis­h between schools that were getting it right, schools that were kind of on the right track but needed more work, and schools that we felt were failing. And a grade can do that.”

But according to some of the Jewish students and profession­als working on the campuses, the ADL got it wrong. In the day or so since the ADL released the grades, a number of students and Hillel directors – along with the CEO of Hillel Internatio­nal – have spoken out about the letter grades. One called the grade a “massive oversimpli­fication” of complicate­d yet vibrant realities for Jewish students.

Rabbi Gil Steinlauf, executive director of Princeton’s Center for Jewish Life, called the ADL’s “F” grade for the university “misleading.” “In truth, over the past two years of my deep engagement with Jewish life on Princeton’s campus, I can say very clearly that Princeton is a great place to be Jewish,” Steinlauf wrote in a statement. He added that Princeton’s leadership, administra­tion, and faculty are “deeply supportive of our Jewish students.”

The pushback from Hillel is especially notable, as Hillel and the ADL have publicly partnered on initiative­s to assess, report, and combat antisemiti­sm on campus. The list of schools that the ADL graded was based on Hillel Internatio­nal’s list of the top 30 public and private campuses by Jewish enrollment, along with other top nationally ranked colleges.

The criticism comes despite Jewish groups being largely in agreement that campus antisemiti­sm has become a significan­t problem, particular­ly since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7.

“We do not believe it is constructi­ve or accurate to try to assign grades to schools as a means of assessing the totality of Jewish student experience at those campuses,” Adam Lehman, Hillel Internatio­nal’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “Efforts to do so, however well-intended, produce misleading impression­s regarding the actual Jewish student experience at those schools. On the contrary, we think it’s important for prospectiv­e students and families to pursue a more holistic understand­ing of Jewish campus life.”

Hillel and Chabad directors at several individual schools also decried the ratings system, including at Michigan State University (which scored an F), the University of Wisconsin-Madison, George Washington University, and the University

of Vermont (which all received Cs).

The Hillel and Chabad of Michigan State University issued a joint statement condemning the failing grade, saying it “misses the holistic picture of Jewish life on our campus.”

Greg Steinberge­r, director of Wisconsin’s Hillel, said that Jewish life on his campus “is better than the grade offered by ADL, which has a limited view of the campus and the vibrant Jewish experience offered by the university, and by on-campus organizati­ons like UW Hillel.”

Adena Kirstein, executive director of the Hillel at George Washington University, said in a statement, “We believe strongly that boiling down any campus climate or nuanced communal environmen­t to a single letter grade is a massive oversimpli­fication of very complex dynamics.”

GWU scored a “C” in the ADL’s assessment – which the organizati­on characteri­zes as “Correction­s Needed” – in part due to headline-grabbing incidents of pro-Palestinia­n students projecting phrases including “Glory to our martyrs” onto campus buildings. At the same time, the report card noted the

school has an “active Jewish life” and an anti-BDS policy, has formed an advisory council to address antisemiti­sm, is participat­ing in a Hillel-led antisemiti­sm education program, and “publicly condemns antisemiti­c incidents.”

Factors in other schools’ assessment­s also appeared to be in tension with each other. Dartmouth College, a school the secretary of education has celebrated for its approach to communal dialogue around Israel, was rated a C, with the ADL citing a small number of student protests and “calls for divestment.” Other schools were marked down for incidents that administra­tors have addressed. The University of Vermont, which received a “C,” recently pledged to devote significan­t resources toward protecting Jewish students as part of the results of a Department of Education investigat­ion.

Vermont’s own Hillel director, who has criticized the school’s administra­tion in the past, says that pledge from university leadership deserves more attention.

“Jewish students receive prompt responses and follow through when they file bias and harassment reports,” Matthew Vogel said in a statement. “Every campus in the country has antisemiti­sm; what matters is how the university responds and the strong Jewish organizati­ons that exist to support our communitie­s.”

Responding to the criticisms Friday, ADL staff members said they stand by the grading project and the process behind it. The ADL’s Goodman said the organizati­on views the grades as a “progress report” that can be changed if the schools take action. Several have already contacted the organizati­on to ask how they can improve their standing, she said.

To determine how to assign the grades, ADL antisemiti­sm researcher Masha Zemtsov said the group took a broad survey of Jewish college students nationwide, and also sent questionna­ires to campus Hillel and Chabad representa­tives that could be filled out anonymousl­y.

Individual students at each campus were not surveyed, though Goodman said the ADL hopes to do that in future years, along with expanding the roster of schools to grade.

Zemtsov added that the ADL weighted three broad categories: incidents, Jewish student life, and administra­tive policies around antisemiti­sm. The weighting system, she said, was based on the responses in its survey of students, who she said gave more or less equal considerat­ion to all three categories. This meant, said Zemtsov, that “there would be a student voice deciding how we basically weighted each of the criteria.”

The ADL also considered anti-Zionist protests, and gave particular weight to violent incidents and threats of violence, as well as incidents led by faculty or staff. Nonviolent student protests were given less weight.

ADL staff stressed that protests simply against Israeli policies wouldn’t count unless they crossed a line into more overt singling out of Israel.

“We did not count just criticisms of the Israeli government, of the way Israel is prosecutin­g a war,” Zemtsov said, adding that the ADL only counted “really clear anti-Zionism, pro-terrorism, the way our center on extremism designates these things.”

Some Jewish groups said the ADL weighed Israel-related campus activity unfairly. Campuses with anti-Zionist protesters and active pro-Palestinia­n groups like Students for Justice in Palestine received markdowns in the “Incidents” portion of the ADL’s grading system.

Students active with J Street U, the campus arm of the liberal Israel lobby, said the ADL’s criteria didn’t match their experience.

“One of the criteria is, you’re doing well if you have pro-Israel programmin­g on campus. Now, what that means to the ADL is radically different from what that means to someone who’s a part of J Street,” Meirav Solomon, a Jewish sophomore at Tufts University and president of the school’s J Street U chapter, said.

The ADL gave Tufts an F; the school has recently had contentiou­s student government-led BDS votes that resulted in Jewish students being targeted with antisemiti­c language. But Solomon said that doesn’t tell the whole story, and compared the ADL’s report cards to “outside groups” with ideologica­l agendas that have fought for a piece of the campus antisemiti­sm narrative since October 7.

“To give us an F is to basically paint with a very wide brush over the actual, nuanced experience­s of what it actually means to be a Jewish student on college campus right now,” she said. “It honestly feels dismissing of my Jewish college experience.”

 ?? (Hillel Internatio­nal/JTA) ?? STUDENTS AND community members from Michigan State University Hillel hold a vigil after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.
(Hillel Internatio­nal/JTA) STUDENTS AND community members from Michigan State University Hillel hold a vigil after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.

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