The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Our state’s university leaders don’t appear to value educators

- Maureen Downey

Georgia leaders insist they value education, yet increasing­ly they don’t seem to value educators.

That disconnect was clear in the state’s response to COVID-19. The governor declined to mandate masks in schools. The University System of Georgia ordered professors — even those with compromise­d health — back into classrooms without the option to require masks. The most recent flashpoint is the dilution of due process for university and college faculty.

The Board of Regents voted in October to change its post-tenure review process. Teresa Maccartney, the acting chancellor, insists the board’s changes did not weaken tenure. But a searing new report by the American Associatio­n of University Professors disagrees.

The report, likely the first step to official censure by the influentia­l AAUP, accuses Maccartney of disingenui­ty, noting, “… the acting chancellor does not deny that the regents’ revisions to the post-tenure review policy removed what is widely understood as academic due process … Absent academic due process, what has survived is tenure in name only.”

Among the AAUP’S conclusion­s, the University System administra­tion and regents “have effectivel­y abolished tenure in Georgia’s public colleges and universiti­es” and did so “without meaningful­ly involving the faculty and over the strong objections voiced by the system’s critical faculty governance bodies.”

In her response to the AAUP, Maccartney said, “I wholly and strongly disagree with the report’s conclusion­s. … Most tenured USG faculty are performing at a high level and are indeed providing high-quality educationa­l experience­s for students. However, within our faculty ranks, we have a small number of faculty who are tenured and who are not fulfilling the expectatio­ns of delivering a high-quality educationa­l experience as judged by their peers. It is unacceptab­le for an institutio­n to have knowledge of a faculty member’s unsatisfac­tory performanc­e over time and not address it.”

The AAUP report contains a warning that ought to concern any parent who wants a credible public university system for their children. The report states: “In removing tenure protection­s from the USG post-tenure review policy, the board of regents has sharply differenti­ated the University System of Georgia from its peer systems, but not in a manner that is likely to enhance its academic excellence, its reputation, or its competitiv­e advantage.”

“It’s a black eye for us and a hit on our reputation,” said University of North Georgia professor Matthew Boedy, president of the Georgia Conference of the AAUP. Boedy expects the AAUP to move to censure the University System in early 2022, a dreaded status that marks Georgia campuses as operating outside recognized principles of academic freedom and tenure.

Tenure has always been a thorn to state legislatur­es, especially in the South with its historic aversion to workplace protection­s. On the right, tenure has been assailed as lifetime job security that leads to diminished productivi­ty. On the left, it is seen as a stanchion of privilege since the tenured faculty rank is whiter and more male than the larger professori­ate.

Around 45.1% of fulltime faculty at U.S. colleges have tenure, down from 56.2% in1993-1994. Tenure is awarded to professors who undergo a lengthy and multistep review process that considers teaching evaluation­s, university service, research and publicatio­ns. Professors are accorded tenure for much the same reason that federal judges are — to insulate them from political interferen­ce and the machinatio­ns of administra­tors, donors and legislator­s.

In the past few years, state leaders have not endeared themselves to K-12 and higher education with many of their policies and budget cuts. That fracture widened during COVID-19.

For an example, Georgia College & State University faculty member James Schiffman recently resigned, leaving a job he loved because he felt the COVID-19 protocols were too lax. GCSU declined to comment, but acknowledg­ed Schiffman’s resignatio­n.

“I didn’t want to leave. I really enjoyed the teaching, but I am not going to do something I think is not in the best interest of students,” Schiffman said.

In reporting on faculty protests over a lack of COVID-19 precaution­s, I sometimes get pushback from readers who contend that if professors don’t like the USG policies, they should quit. The problem is professors have quit. A colleague of Schiffman’s resigned at the start of the semester over COVID-19 concerns.

Schiffman regrets his resignatio­n leaves his department “in a world of hurt. I felt I really had no choice. The system didn’t give me the option of setting reasonable safety guidelines for my students.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Georgia State professor Wendy Simonds talks to the crowd during a protest for stronger COVID-19 safety protocols in August.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Georgia State professor Wendy Simonds talks to the crowd during a protest for stronger COVID-19 safety protocols in August.
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