http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20030307-093444-9730r

The president of a California college is sending a letter to President Bush
apologizing for an instructor who gave students extra credit for writing
anti-war missives to the White House.
Citrus College President Louis E. Zellers wrote that Professor Rosalyn Kahn
"did abuse her authority" in assigning students in her Speech 106 class to
write letters to Bush protesting the possible war with Iraq.

"Students were clear in their understanding that they would only receive
credit if they wrote 'protest' letters," Zellers said in a letter of thanks
to FIRE -- the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education -- a
Philadelphia-based campus watchdog group.

FIRE's Chief Executive Officer, Thor L. Halvorssen, praised the school.
"When fully informed of a frightening violation of freedom of conscience,
the college administration responded swiftly and boldly to restore liberty
and to undo the harm already done," he said.

Citrus is a two-year community college in Glendora, Calif., in the foothills
of the San Gabriel Mountains in eastern Los Angeles County. Kahn's Speech
106 class is a required course.

Kahn made a similar assignment with state Sen. Jack Scott, D-Pasadena, as
the intended recipient. "Again, all students understood that they would only
receive extra credit if they wrote letters expressing a specific political
agenda," Zellers wrote.

Halvorssen said that Kahn collected the letters from the class and
personally delivered them to Scott. "The senator's office told FIRE that the
letters were not solicited," he said.

Zellers called Kahn's assignment "an injustice" that ought not to have
happened. "I am sending a letter of apology to Senator Jack Scott,
explaining the illegitimate nature of the assignment and requesting that all
letters associated with the assignment be retracted," the college president
wrote to FIRE.

Efforts to reach Kahn Friday afternoon were unsuccessful.

Samuel Lee, associate dean for Language Arts and Foreign Languages, told
United Press International that he already had taken action before being
contacted by FIRE but that the details and perspectives FIRE provided helped
him to form his thoughts more clearly. "I'm thankful to them, actually, for
that," he said.

Lee said on Feb. 27 he spent an hour with two students -- including Chris
Stevens, who contacted FIRE and requested its assistance -- "listening to
their complaints about this instructor." The next day Lee asked Kahn if
there was any truth to the allegation that she gave students extra credit
assignments to serve her personal agenda. "I was able to confirm with her
that that did take place," Lee said.

The dean said on Tuesday he sent Kahn a detailed e-mail, with copies to the
students, saying the practice had to stop and must be set right. All
students in the class were given the chance to resubmit letters expressing
any political opinion they might have and receive credit for them. Lee said
Kahn was instructed to apologize to students "and a number of other actions
we wanted her to take."

Lee said FIRE's fax on Tuesday provided him with details, and other
complaints, of which he had been unaware. "They also sort of lit a fire
under my butt, saying: 'Hey! This is very serious. We're not satisfied with
what we've seen of your response yet."

On Thursday Lee gave Kahn the day off and met with the class for more than
an hour. He asked the students "a list of very specific questions" about the
allegations. "I was able to verify that these two assignments were given,
and it was essentially the way the student (Stevens) and FIRE were
portraying it."

Lee said after hearing what the class had to say, he publicly apologized to
the students on behalf of the college for what he views as an abuse of
power.

Lee told UPI that he promised students a written account of their grades to
date so they can make any disputes known before marks are assigned.

Stevens was heartened by the outcome. "In three days, FIRE undid four awful
weeks of abusive power," he told the foundation. "I'm so grateful to FIRE
for coming to our rescue."

The nonprofit describes itself as "devoted to free speech, individual
liberty, religious freedom, the rights of conscience, legal equality, due
process, and academic freedom on our nation's campuses." It was founded in
1999 by University of Pennsylvania historian Alan Charles Kors and Boston
civil rights attorney Harvey A. Silverglate.



xponent
Credit Maru
rob

but i ain't got a hammer
and i ain't got a pencil
and i ain't got a lasso
so i'm doing it the hard way
like a post post-modern man



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