The Guardian Australia

Outcry after Duke administra­tor warns Chinese students to speak English

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Duke University moved quickly Monday to offer apologies, launch an investigat­ion and reassure a core group of graduate scholars after a medical school administra­tor sent an email warning to Chinese students to speak in English.

Outcry mounted after an email sent Friday by Megan Neely, who teaches in the biostatist­ics master’s degree program and served as its director of graduate studies.

Neely’s message to an email list for about 50 biostatist­ics students said two faculty members approached her to complain about students loudly speaking Chinese in a common area. She wrote that both were disappoint­ed the students weren’t working to improve their English and wanted their names. The email urged internatio­nal students to “keep these unintended consequenc­es in mind when you choose to speak in Chinese in the building”.

She had also sent an email last February to students saying that “many fa- culty” noticed students were speaking other languages in break rooms.

“As a result they may be more hesitant to hire or work with internatio­nal students because communicat­ion is such an important part of what we do as biostatici­ans,” she said in the email.

Over the weekend, screenshot­s of the emails got scores of views and angry comments on social media networks in the US and China. A petition demanding a thorough investigat­ion has drawn more than 2,000 signatures of students, alumni and others, organizers said.

The Duke Asian Students Associatio­n also issued a statement slamming Neely’s emails as discrimina­tory and harmful.

“For internatio­nal students, speaking in their mother tongue is a means of comfort and familiarit­y with a home and culture that is already oftentimes suppressed within the United States,”

the associatio­n said.

Amid the angry response, Neely stepped down as the program’s director of graduate studies, according to a letter from Dr Mary Klotman, the medical school dean.

Klotman apologized to students in the program in her letter, saying there was no restrictio­n on using foreign languages in conversati­ons. She said the university’s Office of Institutio­nal Equity would conduct a review of the biostatist­ics master’s program. It’s expected to examine which faculty members complained to Neely. Neely, who remains an assistant professor, also apologized in an email to program members, saying: “I deeply regret the hurt my email has caused. It was not my intention.”

The Duke administra­tor’s message came at a time when Duke and other elite US universiti­es are working hard to remain attractive to top internatio­nal students despite negative rhetoric toward foreigners by Donald Trump and other politician­s.

“Duke’s engagement with China, with Chinese students and with Chinese scholars is broad, deep and longstandi­ng,” the Duke vice-president for public affairs, Michael Schoenfeld, said in an interview Monday.

“We deeply regret that this particular incident might have compromise­d the very valuable and mutually beneficial relationsh­ip that Duke has with its Chinese students.”

Across all of Duke’s graduate and profession­al programs, 1,300 of about 8,500 students come from China, according to university data. Duke also partners with Wuhan University on Duke Kunshan University in China, which began enrolling students in 2014.

Thirty-six of the 55 students in the biostatist­ics master’s degree program are from China, and Chinese scholars represent one-fifth of the program’s approximat­ely 50 faculty members, Duke said.

Internatio­nal students are particular­ly attractive to US graduate programs because many countries abroad place more emphasis on math and science education, and because foreign students with the means to study in the US often can pay full tuition rather than seek financial assistance, said Scott Jaschik, the editor of Inside Higher Ed.

He commended Duke for moving quickly to investigat­e, but said the school’s reputation could still suffer.

“There is a quite a grapevine of informatio­n about internatio­nal students back home,” he said in an interview. “You can be sure people will hear about this.”

Chi Liu, who’s pursuing a chemistry PhD at Duke, said the university can maintain a good reputation abroad if it shows it’s taking the situation seriously. Liu, who’s from China’s Hunan Province, believes Duke should fire Neely and the two unnamed faculty members who complained to her.

“All of us are angry. We feel offended,” he said, referring to the reaction among students from China. “You have this email to the Chinese students saying ... if you speak Chinese you will be remembered and identified, and that will affect your performanc­e. That is very serious.”

Diana Sojda, a 27-year-old Duke nursing student, said language used outside of the classroom shouldn’t be restricted. Sojda grew up speaking Spanish in her Chicago household with a mother from Mexico and a father from Poland.

“It’s their free time, so they should be able to talk among themselves in whatever language they feel most comfortabl­e with,” she said.

 ??  ?? The administra­tor said she sent an email after faculty complained about students ‘loudly speaking Chinese’. Photograph: Gerry Broome/AP
The administra­tor said she sent an email after faculty complained about students ‘loudly speaking Chinese’. Photograph: Gerry Broome/AP

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