Lt. Governor Dan Patrick of Texas explains in this video why he wants to eliminate tenure in the colleges and universities of Texas. He believes in “academic freedom,” he says, but he thinks the legislature should govern what is taught in universities. He lashed out at professors who want to teach “critical race theory.” He believes that there is no academic freedom for those who want to teach the Constitution (!), but only for those who teach controversial topics.
Apparently he thinks that academic freedom and tenure should protect only those who share his views.
Just how dangerous is Dan Patrick’s proposal?
Seth Masket, director of the Center on American Politics at the University of Denver, understands that Patrick threatens one of our nation’s greatest treasures: its public institutions of higher education.
He writes, at NBC’s website:
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick announced last month a plan to phase out all tenure in Texas’ public colleges and universities, and to revoke tenure for those who teach critical race theory. These changes would have dramatic effects on public education in Texas and, ultimately, across the United States, undermining academic freedom and compromising a higher education system that is the envy of the world.
If you were to make a list of the United States’ most significant contributions to the world, our public university systems would have to be somewhere near the top. According to U.S. News’ rankings, of the top 20 universities around the world, 15 are American, and five of those are public. Thanks to these and other universities, the U.S. dominates Nobel Prizes and other scholarly achievements, while it educates tens of millions of students annually. Typically, about a million students per year come from other countries to attend American colleges and universities. Those on student visas largely return to their home countries, spreading the knowledge and values they learn here.
Rather remarkably, this is not widely celebrated. Worse, America’s public universities are currently being attacked from multiple sources, threatening both our educational integrity and global reputation, to say nothing of the way such attacks could impact student opportunities.
The first of these attacks stems from a rather long-term historical force — declining state budgets. States are simply subsidizing public education far less than they used to do. Outside just a handful of states, per-student funding from state governments dropped substantially over the past few decades. Students and their families increasingly have to make up that difference.
But there’s a more immediate threat going on, of which Patrick is only the latest instigator. Patrick is hardly the first state leader to go after tenure for university professors. Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker worked to weaken tenure protections at his state’s university system. A current bill in South Carolina would end tenure in that state. Georgia made it easier last year for administrators in public universities to fire tenured professors. Tenure has long been a target of Republican state officials seeking to reduce the status of the professors they see as elitist liberals.
Tenure, of course, is complicated, involving complicated and school-specific standards. Some schools have suspiciously biased tenure patterns. But at its best, tenure serves two important purposes. First, it protects researchers from reprisals. Academics may produce findings that make state leaders uncomfortable or defensive — tenure helps assure that findings are not suppressed and altered. Think, for example, of recent academic debates over whether voter ID and other voting restrictions disproportionately affect people of color and actually reduce turnout. This is an important discussion that quite legitimately makes people on all sides of it uncomfortable. But researchers must be able to pursue the truth without fear of losing their jobs…
Second, tenure is a valuable perk for professors who could typically make more money in another line of work. In both these senses, tenure helps keep top scholarly talent at universities producing important and occasionally critical and politically unpopular research.
But Patrick’s second announcement, that he is seeking to revoke tenure protections for professors who teach critical race theory, is even more sinister. It’s important to note first that very few professors outside of law school actually teach critical race theory. Rather, the term “critical race theory” for public officials like Patrick has come to mean any lessons involving race, identity and/or history that conservatives do not like. For some, critical race theory now just means any history lesson that might make white students feel bad. It’s not hard to guess who will be blamed for teaching these sorts of lessons, and who will more readily be fired or silenced as a result…
Great public university systems with top scholars educating millions of students at (relatively) low cost are legitimately one of the U.S.’ greatest accomplishments. We are watching that accomplishment being dismantled before our eyes
Lt. Governor of Texas, Dan Patrick is a MORON!
The radical right wants to impose its vision on our young people. They claim to support “freedom” while they create laws that impede the very freedom they espouse. Right wing governors are in a race to the bottom as they wage war against academic freedom, free speech, public institutions, LBGT folks and women.
Say what you will about Texas, it has an excellent system of public colleges and universities. It also has a very good system of community colleges that prepare young people for careers and workplace advancement.
Yes, the radical right believes everyone should be free to agree with them. Disagreement is criminalized.
That is precisely correct, and the heart of the matter.
I have always had the idea that tenure for university professors came from the McCarthy era. Young people who had been members of Communist Parties in their younger days were being blackballed for their past interests. Not sure where O got that idea. Maybe tenure has an older history than that.
Modern criticism that suggests tenure is responsible for incompetence is a red herring. What people who oppose tenure want is the power to direct and control others, an attitude antithetical to learning and its institutions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_tenure_in_North_Amer
Roy, the fight for academic freedom in higher education has been led by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). Google and read about its “Statement of Principles.”
red herring: yes. What much of the “anti-CRT” and anti-LGBTQ noise is all about in these months before the 2022 elections
Trump-level stupid. My kids had gerbils smarter than this man is.
The 2022 election may be more important than the 2024 election if any of these Punk Ass Stupid and dangerous Trumpist, MAGA mindless zombies end up getting elected.
Imagine the damage and destruction that would be caused by having dozens of elected representatives similar to Marjorie Taylor Green in leadership positions throughout state and federal governments, spreading like a 4th stage pancreatic cancer.
These kind of candidates would not be running for office and getting as much attention as they re if it wasn’t for the traitor and his anus for a mouth spewing endless toxic diarrhea.
Freaks that think like this represent Trump’s support base. I shudder at the thought of a government led by “Them”. Cockroaches would be better leaders.
THIS! is the virus that needs fighting against: stupidity.
What’s the expression? Dumber than a box of rocks? Yes: that’s it!
This will resonate with the MAGA base since they have no idea what higher education is about. In order to defeat this our voters must vote in every election. Getting the vote out and never being on the defensive campaigning should be the goal of every Democrat running for office. No intra party fights. No apologizing. Attack, period.
“Great public university systems with top scholars educating millions of students at (relatively) low cost are legitimately one of the U.S.’ greatest accomplishments. ”
I completely agree except the relative low cost. There has been talk about forgiving student loans and free public higher ed. I wonder if anybody has a good guess when they will happen? They will happen, IMO.