Florida is the state where freedom goes to die. The state university system intends to eliminate tenure and replace it with a five-year evaluation system. Theoretically, the review won’t include political views, but all professors will be expected to comply with state laws. Anyone who teaches courses about race, racism, gay studies, or inequality is unlikely to get a favorable evaluation because those subjects are banned by state law. Anyone who teaches or defends critical race theory is likely to be ousted.
Florida’s state university system is making major changes to long-time tenure protections, meaning that established professors would have to undergo a review every five years to determine the faculty members’ “productivity.”
However, Florida-based professors and other advocates say that the new rule, approved by the Florida Board of Governors Wednesday, could hurt academic freedom and impact a faculty members’ livelihood.
The issue of Florida’s five-year post-tenure evaluations, among other changes to the state’s universities, is getting nationwide criticism from multiple organizations, including American Association of University Professors, the American Psychological Association, Modern Language Association, and American Historical Association and a dozen others.
Faculty in other states are even voicing their opposition to Florida’s new higher education policies, such as the University of Rhode Island Faculty Senate and the Professional Staff Congress of the City University of New York.
“Over the past two years, Florida elected officials have attacked the independence and integrity of the state’s public higher education institutions…introducing a requirement for five-year post-tenure reviews, they have undermined tenure and academic freedom,” the Professional Staff Congress said in a written statement.
The American Association of University Professors explains that tenure serves as a “safeguard” for a professor’s academic freedom.
“A tenured appointment is an indefinite appointment that can be terminated only for cause or under extraordinary circumstances such as financial exigency and program discontinuation,” the AAUP explains on its website.
It continues: “When faculty members can lose their positions because of their speech, publications, or research findings, they cannot properly fulfill their core responsibilities to advance and transmit knowledge.”
But new rules adopted Wednesday by the Florida Board of Governors tasks each university board of trustees to adopt policies that evaluate tenured professors on a handful of unified goals from a statewide standpoint.
The rule adoption is due to a new law from the 2022 legislative session, which was pushed by then-Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., who added in a last-minute amendment calling for the 5-year tenure review. Then Sen. Ray Rodrigues was a co-sponsor. Diaz is now the Florida Education Commissioner. Rodrigues is the Chancellor of the university system.
Under this new rule, faculty are to be evaluated on “productivity,” “meeting the responsibilities and expectations associated with assigned duties,” and “compliance with state laws, Board of Governors’ regulations, and university regulations and policies.”
The chief academic officer of the university, often referred to as the ‘provost,’ would make the final call on a professor’s performance, according to the rule.
But the Florida higher education system has experienced an overhaul by the DeSantis administration, facing a mountain of changes that cater to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ conservative views regarding a variety of concerns, including tenure protections. That’s why some Florida professors are concerned that the state is becoming a hostile environment for current and prospective faculty.
The rule says that a professor evaluation “shall not consider or otherwise discriminate” based on a professor’s “political or ideological viewpoints,” but some are skeptical on whether that provision will be adhered to.
“The way that many of our faculty are looking at it is that this is intentionally designed from the ground up to allow bad actors to cull faculty from departments with whom they personally disagree or who have politics that are inconvenient to the institution,” Andrew Gothard, president of United Faculty of Florida, told the Phoenix.
“Or, as we’ve seen with the narrative that’s been coming out of Tallahassee, who have politics that disagree with those of the governor,” he added.
DeSantis seems to desire to be dictator of a banana republic and so is turning his state into one. I can’t wait until he attacks those against his new tenure policy as “pointy-headed intellectuals.”
The lying talking point that you will hear soon is so obvious, it’ll go a little something like this:
“You work hard every day, have to prove yourself every day, and who’s protecting your job for the rest of your life? Why should people who work part-time for a full-time salary get to go on vacations around the world to ‘study’ stuff like how some insects walk and other dumb wastes like that get job protection for life? Or time off to ‘think’ or ‘reenergize’ while you have to put in your full work week looking forward to a night off. That’s what tenure is folks. And what kinds of role models are those for our kids!”
I take a sort of pride/shame that I was able to write very convincing anti-abortion and anti-gun control statements in a previous life.
There won’t be any tenured professors to “evaluate.” Grad students (if any) will be taught by Sunday School teachers and political hacks and their post-graduate degrees will be about as worthless as those from Trump University.
exactly
The GOP is waging a war on political, social and institutional norms in our society. Education is a cohesive glue so it is therefore a target of those that seek to change the nature of our society. DeSantis is the poster boy for this authoritarian movement. Eliminating tenure in higher education is a step toward the destabilization of higher education in the state. ‘Truthout’ has a very well written article about the GOP strategy called “The Politics of Disappearance.” https://truthout.org/
Great article RT!
My Florida college has had 3 year reviews for all faculty for decades.
With and without tenure.
How to ensure that top academic talent will give Flor-uh-duh a wide berth,
by Rhonda Stalin
Ronda doesn’t want top academic talent. He wants subservient talent. Real talent is never subservient.
Remember when professors like Mary Budd Rowe and Richard Allington (former reading prof SUNY Albany) took positions at Florida universities?
Horrible idea if true.
Eliminating tenure and having professors evaluated every five years is bald stupidity, but, let’s face the sad fact that it is not the dumbest idea yet. To match the pinnacle of nincompoopery, Florida would have to eliminate tenure and have professors evaluated by the test scores of their students. The Sunswine State would have to force the literature professors who have their students read to learn proctor standardized tests of whether the students are learning to read. Professors of international relations, etc. would be evaluated by the scores of the literature professors. The tests would be administered far more often than every five years — more like every five weeks. Then, use an algorithm… We digress quite far, don’t we. That would be the very height of mental deficiency. Bipartisan mental deficiency.
Why would any well-respected professor want to teach in Florida? I’m interested in seeing how many leave for greener pastures. The credibility and thus the rankings of these colleges will drop. UF is a currently a highly-regarded school. For how long?
It’s obvious to me that the end goal of the American fascists that currently control most of the Republican Party is to end public education for everyone that can’t afford to pay for it on their own.
Once the public schools are gone, if the American fascists succeed, then most of the future generations of the working class will grow up illiterate and easier to control with cherry picked Bible versus and propaganda from the likes of Hannity and Tucker, explaining why these fascists American are also waging war against the traditional media and 1st Amendment.