CHICAGO (USA), OMIKAMI-TV - We previously
discussed the treatment of Professor Jason Kilborn, who was put on
indefinite administrative leave after using a censured version of the n-word in
an exam question at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC). He is now suing
the school over his treatment, including the required participation in
sensitivity training and denial of a standard pay increase for faculty.
We discussed
today another free speech controversy at University of Illinois
(Urbana Champaign) over the student government seeking to bar former Attorney
General Jeff Sessions from campus.
Kilborn
wrote a Civil Procedure exam based on an employment discrimination
hypothetical. Kilborn’s Civil Procedure II exam describing how an employee quit
“after she attended a meeting in which other managers expressed their anger at
Plaintiff, calling her a ‘n___’ and ‘b___’ [sic].”
The use of
the censored references led to a complaint in
a letter from the Black Law Students Association and later a petition which
called for Kilborn to be stripped of his committee assignments and other
reforms. The Petition stated:
The slur
shocked students created a momentous distraction and caused unnecessary
distress and anxiety for those taking the exam. Considering the subject
matter, and the call of the question, the use of the “n____” and “b____”
was certainly unwarranted as it did not serve any educational purpose. The
question was culturally insensitive and tone-deaf. It lacked basic civility and
respect for the student body, especially considering our social justice efforts
this year.
The
integration of this dark and vile verbiage on a Civil Procedure II exam was
inexcusable and appropriate measures of accountability must
be executed by the UIC administration.
I previously
objected to the measures taken against Professor Kilborn, which I do believe
undermine academic freedom. He was suspended and put on administrative leave
because of a complaint that in my view was a denial of his pedagogical
privileges. The matter could have been investigated further by the university
after an initial determination not to change his status. Instead, he was
suspended — a decision that clearly will create a chilling effect on other
academics at the school.
Kilborn is
being represented by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE),
which announced the First Amendment lawsuit against the
school. The lawsuit notes that “This same question had appeared on Plaintiff’s
exam in exactly this way for the previous ten years, administered to at least a
dozen classes that included numerous Black and other non-white students. No one
had ever suggested the question was objectionable.”
It also
recounts how he was later told that his suspension was due to a conversation
that he had with a member of the Black Students Association:
Plaintiff
participated in that conversation which was generally cordial and constructive,
and at one point about an hour into the conversation, the student asked why the
law school dean had not shown Plaintiff a student petition criticizing his exam
question. Plaintiff responded, using the same common metaphorical expression he
had used in a similar conversation with his dean days earlier, that perhaps she
had not shared the petition with him because she feared that if Plaintiff saw
the hateful things said about him in that petition, he might “become
homicidal.” The conversation continued with no indication that the student felt
in any way distressed or threatened…
It was reported
to Plaintiff that on the following Monday, January 11, 2021, several students
met (electronically) with the law school dean and other UIC administrators
during which meeting the student with whom Plaintiff had spoken misreported
that Plaintiff had exclaimed that he “was feeling homicidal” or “would become
homicidal.” . 21. The law school dean, along with other defendants, invoked
UIC’s Violence Prevention Plan to convene a Behavioral Threat Assessment Team
(“BTAT”) to assess this purported “threat” of imminent physical violence.
Without communicating with Plaintiff or any other person with firsthand
knowledge, the BTAT authorized the law school dean to take the most extreme
measures.
When he
met with OAE, Plaintiff openly admitted the “become homicidal” comment; at
which time Defendant Bills revealed to Plaintiff that this comment was the
basis for his summary and previously unexplained “indefinite administrative
leave.”
Kilborn was
later informed that he was the subject of an investigation into “allegations of
race based discrimination and harassment” for allegedly “creat[ing] a racially
hostile environment for … non-white students between January, 2020 and January,
2021, particularly during your Civil Procedure II course.”
After
concluding that allegations of racial discrimination had not been
substantiated, the university found that Plaintiff had nonetheless violated the
harassment aspect of UIC policy because his final exam question and his
“responses to criticism of the final exam question” had “interfered with Black
students’ participation in the University’s academic program and therefore
constituted harassing conduct that violates the Policy.”
Besides his
suspension and pay raise denial, Kilborn was informed that he
would be
subjected to an 8- week diversity course 20 hours of course work, required
“self-reflection” papers for each of 5 modules, plus weekly 90-minute sessions
with a trainer followed by three more weeks of vaguely described supplemental
meetings with this trainer. The trainer would provide “feedback regarding
Professor Kilborn’s engagement and commitment to the goals of the program.”
Only upon satisfactory completion of this program would Plaintiff be allowed to
return to class in Fall, 2022.
The
complaint describes a process that lacked specificity and basic due process for
a faculty member to be able to understand and to challenge allegations. These
lawsuits can play an important role in reinforcing basic fairness in the
handling of such allegations.
Here are the
four counts and the complaint:
COUNT I
Violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments
COUNT II
Violation of University of Illinois Statutes
COUNT III
Violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments
COUNT IV
Violation of the Illinois Violence Prevention Plan
Here is the
complaint: Jason-Kilborn-v.-University-of-Illinois-Chicago-—-Complaint1
(Jonatham Turley) OMIKAMI-TV
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