ALLIANCE
DEFENSE FUND NEWS RELEASE
March 9, 2007 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT ADF MEDIA RELATIONS: (480) 444-0020
Professor
discriminates against student’s religious speech and then
retaliates against student for daring to object to the
discrimination
CARBONDALE,
Ill. — Attorneys with the Alliance Defense Fund Center for
Academic Freedom sent a letter Wednesday to officials at
Southern Illinois University, expressing concern over a social
work professor’s continued refusal to grade a student’s paper on
the topic of post-abortion syndrome. The ungraded paper has
resulted in the student receiving an “incomplete” for the course
that could prevent the student from completing her degree.
“Christian students do not forsake their constitutional right to
express their faith-based views the minute they step on a
university campus,” said ADF Litigation Counsel Amy Smith.
“This is just another example of how Christian students are
being punished at our nation’s public universities for
expressing viewpoints that are not ‘politically correct.’ This
professor is holding this student’s paper hostage because the
professor disagreed with the student’s initial intent to include
a faith-based component. The professor’s actions are neither
constitutional nor fitting for a venue universally known as the
marketplace of ideas.”
In the fall of 2006, Christine Mize, a graduate student in the
School of Social Work at SIU, was assigned to create an
eight-week therapy program based on a topic of the student’s own
choosing and supported by independent research. Mize informed
her professor that she intended to create a therapy plan for
women who suffer from post-abortion syndrome, associating it
with post-traumatic stress disorder. Mize informed the
professor that the recovery portion would be faith-based. Upon
hearing of the inclusion of a faith-based recovery plan, the
professor informed Mize that she would downgrade Mize’s paper if
it included such a section. Rather than have the paper
downgraded, Mize reluctantly chose not to include that section.
After receiving some legal information on her constitutional
right to include religion in her assignments when it is
appropriate to the topic, Mize turned in her paper without the
section but provided the professor with the legal information to
avoid any misunderstandings in the future. She did not request
that she be allowed to re-write her paper to include a
faith-based component.
Since then, the professor has refused to grade her paper,
resulting in a grade of “incomplete” for the class, which could
keep her from finishing her degree. After numerous unsuccessful
appeals to school administrators, including filing an official
grievance letter with SIU, Mize turned to the ADF Center for
Academic Freedom for assistance.
A copy of the letter ADF sent to the department director of the
School of Social Work at SIU can be read at
www.telladf.org/UserDocs/MizeLetter.pdf.
“It is our hope that the school will act swiftly and affirm
Christine’s constitutional right to free speech so that she may
continue with her education without fear of further
retaliation,” said Smith.
The ADF Center
for Academic Freedom is defending religious freedom at America’s
public universities.
ADF is a legal
alliance defending the right to hear and speak the Truth through
strategy, training, funding,
and litigation.
www.telladf.org
www.centerforacademicfreedom.org