The Denver Post

Community College of Aurora censured

- By Jennifer Brown

The Community College of Aurora was censured by the nation’s 100-year-old associatio­n for college professors Saturday for “serious departures from principles and standards of academic freedom” over the firing of a part-time philosophy instructor last year.

The American Associatio­n of University Professors, based in Washington, D.C., investigat­ed the firing of Nathanial Bork, who was terminated by the Aurora college as he was about to expose inadequate academic standards to the institutio­n’s accreditin­g agency.

Bork had drafted a letter to the Higher Learning Commission, reporting that the college had lowered its standards in order to improve course completion rates. He was fired without due-process rights and in violation of academic freedom, the AAUP said Saturday.

A “censure” puts CCA on a list of 56 colleges that have violated the principles of academic freedom, which includes professors’ ability to express ideas in teaching and research without retaliatio­n.

CCA communicat­ions director Mary Jackson Meeks called the action “unfortunat­e and unwarrante­d,” adding that the “conclusion­s of the investigat­ing committee did not accurately characteri­ze the college or the situation in question.”

“This action, based on those conclusion­s, does a disservice to the faculty, staff and students of a fine institutio­n,” Meeks said.

The instructor was let go in the fourth week of the fall 2016 semester. His terminatio­n was attributed by college leaders to failing to impose changes in curriculum designed to improve pass rates in entry-level courses, the AAUP said. One week before his firing, Bork told college administra­tors that he planned to send a letter to the Higher Learning Commission that criticized the new curriculum, which he considered an attempt by the college to lower its standards.

The college refused to give Bork a faculty hearing upon his firing, according to the AAUP.

“The administra­tion’s stated rationale for dismissal did little to dispel the impression that its action violated basic tenets of academic freedom,” the AAUP said. And an investigat­ing committee determined that instructor­s at the college felt they had academic freedom “only as long as they retained the favor of their administra­tive superiors.”

On Saturday, the group also lifted previously imposed censures on the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas.

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