Mailbag - Jan. 22, 2002
OCC teachers must continue classroom debate
Regarding Orange Coast College instructor Ken Hearlson’s
discriminatory remarks against his Muslim students in class Sept. 18,
Joseph Bell (The Bell Curve -- “A lost chance to debate academic
freedom,†Dec. 27) gets close to the main issue when he says that for a
college instructor, “the line between provocation and bullying is
amorphous.â€
However, Bell falls short when he says it is “the ultimate
responsibility of the teacher to decide if he is crossing that line.†The
responsibility to say something also belongs to other colleagues,
administrators and students. Many of Hearlson’s colleagues believe, based
on transcripts of the investigation, that Hearlson bullied students with
his unrelenting, insensitive, poorly timed criticisms of Muslims. Many of
his incendiary comments were so generalized that confused students (when
allowed to speak) kept asking Hearlson to qualify his remarks as to
whether he was calling his Muslim students terrorists -- the ones he was
pointing and gesturing at in his class -- or those who murder in the name
of Allah.
While Hearlson’s comments against Muslims and his insistence in
teaching from a fundamental Christian perspective may be protected by
academic freedom, he cannot be shielded from the criticism of his peers
who have read the investigation and regard his classroom management as
contributing to a hostile environment not conducive to learning.
Bell does not realize that the “academic freedom†idea was started by
a few of our colleagues who do not want the public to be “sympathetic to
the administration.†They are also the ones generating rumors that the
administration’s action had a “chilling effect†on teaching at Orange
Coast College.
If the union and academic senate presidents insist that the
administration’s actions have spooked some colleagues who have “decided
to curtail classroom debate,†we would like to know who these weaklings
are and give them some support; a growing number of faculty, obviously
not represented by our faculty presidents, are doing exactly what Bell
suggests, “pushing the edges†and continuing to teach in a provocative
fashion.
GLYNIS HOFFMAN
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: GLYNIS HOFFMAN is a professor of English at OCC
School board needs individuals, not a team
In response to school board President Judy Franco’s remarks about
building consensus and teamwork: We have been there before (“Franco named
new board president,†Dec. 12). We had a team and consensus when we were
bilked out of $4 million. Remember that embezzlement? Yea, way to go,
team.
Franco also mentions a shift from phonics-based to non-phonics-based
education. If we didn’t have all team members, maybe there would have
been a Wendy Leece on the board who would have sounded the alarm to not
throw out phonics. Maybe he or she would have sounded the alarm when
spelling and spelling books were thrown out the window by the “team.â€
I taught combination grades first-second and fifth-sixth from 1963 to
1973. I left teaching to raise a family. Way back then, our children
could read at the end of first grade with varying degrees of success, due
to phonics. I only regret that I gave away all my phonics-based material
and charts. They would be worth their weight in gold today.
I don’t think we need a “team.â€
We need individuals who are interested in educating our children and
not in every new fad to come down the pike. Whole word, fuzzy math,
spelling by sound and not rules, junk science, revised history are all
products of a “team effort.â€
Let’s not build consensus. Anyone who has ever received a grade on a
school project using consensus knows what happens. Why do we want one
voice telling us what our children need?
In order to make sound judgments, we have to hear several viewpoints.
Maybe then we won’t have all these horrible experiments on our children.
SANDY NICHOLS
Corona del Mar
School band meant no harm with Confederate flag
As a very proud parent of a Newport Harbor High School band member and
a member of the graduating class of 1976, I am surprised and perplexed by
the controversy surrounding the sets for this year’s field show (“Newport
Harbor High apologies for halftime show,†Nov 15).
I may be naive, but I never realized that African Americans considered
the Confederate flag a symbol of slavery. I had been taught about the
Confederacy’s fall and this turbulent time in American history, but it is
just that, American history. We cannot deny it happened, and we as a
nation moved forward and became the great indivisible country we are
today. We are the United States, and no time in my life has that been as
apparent as it has in the last few months.
The field show was written well before Sept. 11, and I have watched it
several times with a feeling of great pride, both for my daughter and
because of what this country has overcome, past and present. This show is
purely entertainment and tells a Civil War story, nothing more, nothing
less. I think it’s sad the Westchester principal made such an issue of
this and that use of these props prompted an apology. They did nothing
wrong and do not owe anyone an apology. I am certain that the directors,
the band members and the parents of this great group of kids meant no
harm to anyone.
DEBBY WATSON
Costa Mesa
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