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Academic Freedom In Public Colleges

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Academic freedom has been at the forefront of debate when dealing with Free Speech on public colleges campuses. Through a series of cases, the Supreme Court has ruled on numerous cases recognizing student and faculty rights to academic freedom (354 U.S. 234). In a series of cases the Court has acknowledge Tinker as applying to both public schools as well as public colleges, as well as defining academic freedom and a recognizing student and faculty rights to free expression of ideas, teachings, and other writing pertaining to scholarship and ideals (385 U.S. 589) (408 U.S. 169). Though broad, the Court has laid the ground work to student free speech rights pertaining to the First Amendment. A. SWEEZY V. NEW HAMPSHIRE (1957) The case centers …show more content…

As a frequently cited case for academic freedom, Keyishian provides a standard for academic freedom while also citing the that regulations with a potential chilling effect over freedom of discussion are unconstitutional. Public colleges and universities are cited as needing freedom of open discussion, research, teachings, and published materials (385 U.S. 589). C. HEALY V. JAMES (1972) At the Central Connecticut State College, a group of students organized a campus chapter of the Students for Democratic Society (SDS). The SDS was known as a militaristic “anti-establishment” group that posed civil disobedience as well as violent disruption in higher education. The students advocating for the creation of the chapter filed for official acknowledgement by the committee for campus organizations. The committee indorsed the organization’s officiation. However, the president withdrew the support stating his thoughts of an adverse impact with the group against school policy (408 U.S. 169). The students filed suit, stating that their rejection violated their First Amendment rights to freedom of expression. The federal court ruled in the college’s favor, in which the Supreme Court granted certiorari (408 U.S. …show more content…

First, in Sweezy, the Court iterated that state concerns about the subversive intent of an individual does not trump the Bill of Rights, there is a vital need for academic freedom in higher education, and providing four freedoms provided by Justice Frankfurter in order to retain an environment within public colleges and universities for discovery and free inquiry: who may teach, what academics may be taught, how they are taught, and who may study (354 U.S. 234). In Keyishian, the Court found regulations felt to be vague and with an adverse chilling effect on student speech to be unconstitutional, reiterating the need for discovery and free inquiry while also defining academic freedom as: “a special concern of the First Amendment which does not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom” (385 U.S. 603). Within Healy, the Court recognized that Tinker pertains just as much to Public universities as it does public schools. This is momentous as Tinker ushered in student free speech able to be regulated only when the speech has the potential to cause a disruption or interference towards class learning and events. The Supreme Court in Healy also was able to draw the line between advocacy, which is protected speech, and action which is not (408 U.S. 169). Overall, these cases bring forth standards and

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