Baltimore Sun

At Fla. college, gender studies is out and jocks are in

- By Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg (Twitter: @ michellein­bklyn) is a columnist for The New York Times, where this piece originally appeared.

In late August, the new school year will begin at Florida’s New College, the progressiv­e public liberal arts school singled out by Gov. Ron DeSantis for cultural transforma­tion. Returning students will find an institutio­n that is increasing­ly unrecogniz­able.

Over one-third of the faculty members have left. Many of last year’s students are continuing their education elsewhere. Last week, New College’s leadership announced that it was moving to abolish the gender studies department. Chris Rufo, the culture warrior whom DeSantis put on New College’s board of trustees, boasted that it would be “the first public university in America to begin rolling back the encroachme­nt of gender ideology and queer theory on its academic offerings.”

The dismantlin­g of gender studies is striking because of how closely it follows a playbook for the ideologica­l transforma­tion of higher education pioneered by Hungary, which banned gender studies in 2018. Given that Rufo frames the New College takeover as a demonstrat­ion project to be repeated by red states nationwide, I’d expect attempts to scrap gender studies to spread.

Rufo speaks a lot about academic excellence and the virtues of a classical liberal education. But as Steven Walker of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported in a damning July story, the incoming class recruited by the new administra­tion has lower average grades, SAT scores and ACT scores than last year’s class.

“Much of the drop in average scores can be attributed to incoming student-athletes who, despite scoring worse on average, have earned a disproport­ionate number of the school’s $10,000-per-year merit-based scholarshi­ps,” wrote Walker.

As of July, New College had 328 incoming students, a record for the school. Of the group, 115 are athletes, and 70 were recruited to play baseball, even though, as Walker reported, New College has no real sports facilities and has yet to be accepted into the National Associatio­n of Intercolle­giate Athletics. By comparison, the University of Florida’s far more establishe­d baseball team has 37 student-athletes.

Some new students may well end up immersing themselves in the great works of the Western canon. But last week, New College’s interim president, Richard Corcoran, a longtime Republican politician who served as DeSantis’ education commission­er, sent a memo to faculty members, proposing new majors in finance, communicat­ions and sports psychology, “which will appeal to many of our newly admitted athletes.”

As Amy Reid, a New College professor of French who directs the gender studies department, said when I spoke to her last weekend, “Tell me how sports psychology, finance and communicat­ions fits with a classical liberal arts model.”

Rather than reviving some traditiona­l model of academic excellence, then, it looks as though New College leaders are simply trying to replace a culture they find politicall­y hostile with one meant to be more congenial. When I spoke to Rufo last weekend, he offered several explanatio­ns for New College’s new emphasis on sports, including the classical idea that a healthy body sustains a healthy mind. But an important part of the investment in athletics, he said, is that it is a way to make New College more male and, by extension, less left wing.

In the past, about two-thirds of New College’s students were women. “This is a wildly out-of-balance student population, and it caused all sorts of cultural problems,” Rufo said. Having so many more women than men, he said, turned New College into “what many have called a social justice ghetto.” The new leadership, he said, is “rebalancin­g the ratio of students” in the hopes of ultimately achieving gender parity.

But gender parity is not necessaril­y compatible with a pure academic meritocrac­y, which Rufo claims to prize. Women are outpacing men in education in many parts of the world, including Saudi Arabia and Iran.

In Hungary, nearly 55% of university students are women, leading the government to warn about the “feminizati­on” of higher education. Selective American colleges tend to have more female than male applicants; to maintain something approachin­g a gender balance, some have adopted lower standards for men.

In other words, it often takes deliberate interventi­on — one might call it affirmativ­e action — to create a student body in which women don’t predominat­e. New College isn’t jettisonin­g gender ideology. It’s just adopting a different one.

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