Orlando Sentinel

Accreditin­g group plans University of Florida visit

Harm of academic freedom allegation­s receive scrutiny

- By Divya Kumar

Officials at the University of Florida have worked to quiet the reaction to recent allegation­s that the school has stifled free speech and harmed academic freedom.

UF President Kent Fuchs says the university is committed to those principles and will try to improve. Board of trustees chairperso­n Mori Hosseini called the allegation­s false and said those who made them were disrespect­ful.

But the organizati­on that accredits the university wants to come to campus and investigat­e before drawing any conclusion­s.

In a letter to the school this week, the Southern Associatio­n of Colleges and Schools said after reviewing media reports and materials sent by the university it has determined “there may be sufficient factual informatio­n supporting significan­t noncomplia­nce with the principles of accreditat­ion.”

After an onsite visit, the letter said, a team from the associatio­n will present its findings to the associatio­n’s board of trustees in June. It said UF would be informed of the board’s decision within two weeks. The letter was sent by Belle Wheelan, president of the associatio­n’s board. The associatio­n is the accreditin­g organizati­on for universiti­es in the southeaste­rn United States.

A loss of accreditat­ion could

lead to a loss of research dollars and federal aid for students. And problems with accreditat­ion could jeopardize UF’s hard-won status as a Top 5 public university.

The allegation­s arose earlier this semester after three UF political science professors were initially barred from testifying against the state in a lawsuit over Florida’s new voting laws.

The university later allowed the three to testify, but the policy that gave rise to the initial decision remained, prompting the faculty members to sue UF in federal court. Since then, more allegation­s have surfaced from a Faculty Senate task force, including reported pressures on those doing work surroundin­g race and COVID-19.

The university launched its own investigat­ion into a report alleging that UF researcher­s had felt pressure to destroy data about the virus. In a November news release, Fuchs stated “unequivoca­lly” that UF’s decisions were not influenced by pressure from outside the university.

University spokeswoma­n Hessy Fernandez said in a statement that the administra­tion is committed to working with faculty to “implement and strengthen policies and transparen­cy” in keeping with a task force set up by Fuchs and a Faculty Senate committee looking at academic freedom issues.

“We have a shared desire to ensure that academic freedom is preserved and protected at the University of Florida,” the statement said. “To that end, we welcome the pending review by (the accreditin­g organizati­on) and will cooperate fully with the committee’s work.”

Earlier this year, the associatio­n launched an inquiry into the hiring process at Florida State University after education commission­er Richard Corcoran was named as a shortliste­d candidate.

Corcoran did not progress as a finalist and the Board of Governors later lambasted Wheelan for getting involved.

 ?? TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY ?? University of Florida in Gainsville.
TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY University of Florida in Gainsville.

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