South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

DeSantis adds to the turmoil at New College

Parents decry changes at public liberal arts school

- By Patricia Mazzei

SARASOTA — After her son began attending New College of Florida, Sonia Howman felt a pang of fear about the future of the small, little-known public liberal arts school on the shores of Sarasota Bay.

Her son, who identifies as LGBTQ and had been bullied in high school, had found “a tiny place of safety in this increasing­ly hostile state,” she said. “I kept praying that DeSantis would never find out about it. But he did.”

A plan by Gov. Ron DeSantis to transform New College, which is known as progressiv­e and describes itself as “a community of free thinkers,” into a beacon of conservati­sm has left students, parents and faculty members at the tight-knit school reeling over what they see as a political assault on their academic freedom. DeSantis’ education commission­er has expressed a desire to remake the school in the image of Hillsdale College, a small Christian school in Michigan that has been active in conservati­ve politics.

Over 25 tumultuous days last month, the Republican governor removed six of the college’s 13 trustees, replacing them with allies holding strongly conservati­ve views. The new board then forced out the college’s president, a career educator, and named DeSantis’ former education commission­er, a career politician, as her replacemen­t. The board signed off on paying its pick a salary of $699,000 a year, more than double what his predecesso­r earned.

DeSantis, who is widely thought to have White House aspiration­s, has made ideologica­l attacks on public education central to his politics. His administra­tion banned instructio­n on gender identity and sexual orientatio­n through third grade, limited what schools can teach about racism, rejected math textbooks and prohibited an Advanced Placement course in African American studies for high school students.

“You knew it would eventually spiral to higher education,” said Sam Sharf, a second-year New College student. “But I didn’t anticipate it would happen this fast.”

On Jan. 31, when the college president was ousted, DeSantis unveiled higher education policies — to further weaken faculty tenure protection­s, eliminate diversity and equity programs and mandate Western civilizati­on courses — that for many deepened a chill that had already taken hold across Florida’s public colleges and universiti­es. The state has made it harder for faculty members to retain tenure, asked students and faculty to fill out a survey about their political leanings and requested informatio­n about resources for transgende­r students.

But the changes may come most abruptly at New College, which has roughly 700 students. One of the new trustees, Christophe­r Rufo, said in early January that the school’s academic department­s “are going to look very different in the next 120 days.”

The denizens of the quiet campus are feeling a pervasive sense of uncertaint­y. Should they stay, or flee? Will the type of student drawn to New College fundamenta­lly change? Will junior faculty members get the tenure they are up for?

“Everything that’s been happening has been very disruptive,” said Elizabeth Leininger, an associate biology professor, noting that the spring semester began the day before the Jan. 31 board meeting. “It’s kind of like when we get a hurricane here in Florida, and everyone’s preoccupie­d.”

That New College faces challenges is indisputab­le. Its enrollment had been dipping until last year. Its dorms are moldy, and its labs are dated. There are few activities outside the classroom. In reviews posted on niche.com, a college ranking site, current and former students have criticized decrepit facilities, lack of structure and, in some cases, what they described as an obsession among students with identity politics.

The college performs poorly in state metrics — such as the number of bachelor’s degrees awarded in high-demand fields and the percentage of graduates making at least $30,000 a year after graduation — designed for huge universiti­es with economies of scale that the school just does not have.

Still, unsupporte­d claims by DeSantis and his allies that New College’s students are being indoctrina­ted by far-left professors have offended students, faculty, parents and alumni, who feel misreprese­nted. Many said that the school welcomed young people who might not fit elsewhere — intensely bookish kids, bullied kids, kids with disabiliti­es, queer kids — and required them to be driven.

That attracts a self-selecting group of young adults, many of them undeniably progressiv­e and LGBTQ, who feel drawn to the existing student body, said students, parents, alumni and faculty. But that does not mean what is taught in classes necessaril­y aligns with students’ views, they added.

Liberal label ‘not true’

Joshua Epstein, who is 17 and on schedule to graduate next year after amassing college credits while in high school, said that if anything, he had become more conservati­ve at New College. He credited professors who teach many points of view and encourage students to make their own judgments. He switched his major from political science to quantitati­ve economics and hoped to become a corporate lawyer or an investment banker

“The painting of this school as a liberal university with all students who are socialist radicals is just not true,” he said.

He said he would welcome more conservati­ves on campus — for him, a close-to-even ideologica­l split would be ideal — but feared that was not the governor’s goal.

“I wholeheart­edly support any effort to bring conservati­ve students to this campus and to bring more conservati­ve professors,” he said. “I don’t want them to take the school and turn it into a solely conservati­ve institutio­n with only conservati­ve professors. I think that’s the antithesis of what they’re preaching.”

R. Derek Black, a 2013 graduate, said the educationa­l independen­ce that New College fosters — students design their own academic programs and have few required classes — tends to make its students “generally less conformist.” So they are less likely to hew to social expectatio­ns, he said, but that does not undermine the school’s academics.

“When I was there, and still as far as I can tell, it feels like intellectu­al rigor is disconnect­ed from upholding a social norm of being strait-laced,” he said in written responses to questions.

At New College, students complete a thesis to graduate. Class sizes average 10 students. Students do not receive grades but either pass or fail, with a narrative evaluation. Many students devote themselves to independen­t study programs.

The school boasts an impressive rate of alumni who go to graduate school, receive prestigiou­s fellowship­s and make high salaries a decade after graduation.

Annual tuition for Florida residents is about $7,000.

DeSantis blamed the school’s embrace of diversity and equity programs, which he argues serve as “an ideologica­l filter,” for its failure to attract more students.

“That’s part of the reason I think it hasn’t been successful and the enrollment is down so much,” he said hours before the Jan. 31 board meeting. “I’ve talked to people who live in Sarasota and didn’t know what New College was.”

He has promised $15 million for new faculty and scholarshi­ps, which could be transforma­tive, several current and former faculty members said. But they and others wondered why the state had never invested that sort of money in New College before.

Lack of enough funding

New College has been underfunde­d since state lawmakers made it independen­t in 2001, according to several current and former faculty members, alumni and a former trustee. Before that, it had been part of the University of South Florida for 26 years.

Providing a liberal arts education, with low faculty- student ratios and intimate classroom experience­s, is expensive. But when the state separated New College from USF, it failed to adequately fund its administra­tion and later its capital budget, current and former faculty members and a former trustee said, leading to a threadbare staff, nonexisten­t marketing and degraded facilities, all of which hurt enrollment over time.

The coronaviru­s pandemic further hurt New College’s enrollment. In 2021, after a six-month national search, trustees hired Patricia Okker, a former University of Missouri dean, as president. Charged with turning the school around, chiefly by growing the student body but also by improving fund-raising, the school’s national reputation and its diversity and equity programs, she helped increase enrollment in 2022.

But that mattered little to save her job. Hours before DeSantis’ new trustees held their first meeting on Jan. 31, word leaked that Richard Corcoran, the former state education commission­er, would be named the school’s interim president. Corcoran will make a base annual salary of $699,000, compared with Okker’s $305,000. The president of Florida State, which has about 40,000 students, makes a base salary of $700,000

How the new trustees organized the leadership change without running afoul of Florida’s Sunshine Law, which prohibits members of the same board from discussing public business in private, remains unclear. Corcoran did not return calls seeking comment. Neither did Okker.

Not a single member of the public spoke in favor of the new trustees’ plans at the meeting.

“I’m getting condolence messages before the meeting starts from students in other schools because they leaked what was going to happen before the meeting,” said Alex Obraud, 21, a third-year student. “It’s just very clear: Something’s very wrong.”

“They don’t care about the school,” he said of the new trustees. “They don’t care about the students.”

Near the campus entrance, yard signs warn visitors: “Your campus is next.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Richard Corcoran, a former House speaker staunch DeSantis ally, was named the interim president of New College. The board signed off on paying its pick a salary of $699,000 a year, more than double what his predecesso­r earned.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Richard Corcoran, a former House speaker staunch DeSantis ally, was named the interim president of New College. The board signed off on paying its pick a salary of $699,000 a year, more than double what his predecesso­r earned.
 ?? FILE ?? Audience members at a meeting in Sarasota cheer for Patricia Okker, the outgoing president of New College of Florida, on Jan. 31. Gov. Ron DeSantis removed six of the school’s 13 trustees, replacing them with allies holding strongly conservati­ve views. DeSantis’s plan to transform New College of Florida into a beacon of conservati­sm has left students and faculty members at the tight-knit, progressiv­e school reeling.
FILE Audience members at a meeting in Sarasota cheer for Patricia Okker, the outgoing president of New College of Florida, on Jan. 31. Gov. Ron DeSantis removed six of the school’s 13 trustees, replacing them with allies holding strongly conservati­ve views. DeSantis’s plan to transform New College of Florida into a beacon of conservati­sm has left students and faculty members at the tight-knit, progressiv­e school reeling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States