Miami Herald

A progressiv­e college in the Northeast has a proposal for unhappy New College students

- BY LINDA ROBERTSON lrobertson@miamiheral­d.com

College of Massachuse­tts, known for its progressiv­e, iconoclast­ic approach to higher education, is offering admission and a tuition match to all students at New College of Florida, a school that has a similar philosophy and is being overhauled by Gov. Ron DeSantis and the conservati­ve leaders he appointed to run it.

“This opportunit­y is in response to the continuing attacks on New College intended to limit intellectu­al exploratio­n, turn back progress toward inclusion, and curtail open discussion of race, injustice and histories of oppression,” Hampshire said in a statement dated March 9. “By committing to impose a narrowly politicize­d curriculum on New College, the newly appointed trustees broke promises made to its current students to support a self-directed, rigorous education grounded in a commitment to free inquiry.”

Hampshire College, a private school in Amherst, Mass., with a fall 2021 undergradu­ate enrollment of 472 and tuition and fees of $54,812, offered to match the current cost of tuition for New College students who choose to transfer. Alumni include documenHam­pshire tary filmmaker Ken Burns and Jon Krakauer, who wrote “Into the Wild,” the best-seller about Chris McCandless, who lived in the wild before his body was found in an abandoned bus in Alaska.

New College, a state school in Sarasota, has an undergradu­ate enrollment of 632 and charges $6,916 for in-state tuition and fees and $29,944 for out-ofstate students, according to the most recent U.S. News & World Report college rankings.

New College, founded in 1960, faces a transforma­tion under its new president and six new board of trustees members picked by DeSantis. In its first meeting at the end of February under interim President Richard Corcoran, a former Florida House speaker and state education commission­er, trustees voted to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion “bureaucrac­ies” at the state university system’s smallest campus. The board will close the Office of Outreach and Inclusive Excellence, banned mandatory diversity training and ended the college’s diversity statements. It also prohibited “identity-based preference­s” in admissions, hiring and promotions.

Ex-President Patricia Okker, who was fired, described a “hostile takeover” by conservati­ves who want to remake the school and adopt the values of Hillsdale College in Michigan, a small conservati­ve college that pushed Florida to reject certain math textbooks and has been instrument­al in overhaulin­g how civics is taught at the state’s public schools, infusing the curriculum with Christiani­ty and conservati­ve ideologies.

Corcoran will earn a base salary of $699,000, plus more than $200,000 in added benefits, a pay bump of nearly $400,000 over Okker.

STUDENT PROTESTS

New College students have protested the changes. Hampshire said it had consulted with student organizers and is “proud to stand with students who crave a progressiv­e education. Hampshire will provide a welcoming environmen­t for all who want the freedom to study and act on the urgent challenges of our time, without ideologica­l limits imposed by the state.”

Hampshire, founded in 1965, is a member of in Western Massachuse­tts’ Five College Consortium, which also includes Amherst, Smith, Mount Holyoke and the University of Massachuse­tts at Amherst. There are no majors or grades at Hampshire. Students create their own individual course of study and a series of six exams that must be passed to graduate.

Binghamton University, part of the State University of New York, is also pitching its school’s academic freedom and welcoming culture to New College and other Florida students.

“To be blunt: those students, teachers and researcher­s whom some in Florida would like to silence or expel are very welcome here,” wrote Donald E.

Hall, provost and executive vice president, in an opinion column posted Tuesday on the Miami Herald’s Opinion and Commentary site.

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