An inside look at the ‘Free Speech’ class UCLA blocked students … – The College Fix

Posted: March 2, 2017 at 2:04 pm

LOS ANGELES, Calif. Numerous empty seats pepperedthe large lecture hall. Multiple students strolled into class late while others trickled out early. That was the scene on a recent Wednesday nightas lecturer Keith Fink taught his popular class on free speech at the public university.

While there areplenty of seats available for many more students to take the class, more than 40 students have been blocked from this popular UCLA course.

The courses lecture hall holds nearly 300 seats, but just 200 of the 241 students who tried to sign up for the class were enrolled. Thats left more than three dozen students shut out of a course taught by a professor focused onteaching students the value of the First Amendment.

Such is the situation in Finks Communication Studies 167: Sex, Politics, and Race: Free Speech on Campus.

The class made headlines recently after Fink, a conservative who openly criticizes campus administrators during his classes for what he contends is their violation of students free speech rights, claimed his department is keeping students who are attempting to add the course from enrolling init because of politicalbias.

The chair of the department says its aboutmaintaining reasonable class sizes across the major.

Finks not buying it.

This is nuts. They are penalizing the students to get at me, hesaid.

I believe my role is to test students beliefs theyre holding at a young age, to probe the reasons for their belief, to criticize views they may have, to expose them to other views. Thats my role, Fink told The College Fix.

The labor and employment lawyer added his job as a professor is not to tell [students] how to think. Its to make them think.

The Free Speech course, which Fink has taught for nine years, focuses on how the First Amendment, case law, state statutes, and federal statutes affect students and teachers ability to express themselves both on and off campuses, per the syllabus.

(Pictured: Empty seats in class students seek to enroll in)

Course readings in part include a textbook written by Fink as well as case law. Class topics touch on harassment issues, speech codes, campus protests, the rights of student publications and due process rights, among others.

The course, held on Wednesday nights, delves into controversial, timely campus issues. For instance, a list of nearly two dozen discussion topics on the syllabus includes questions such as Should teachers provide trigger warnings before [discussing] a topic that some find sensitive? and Can students be punished for burning the American flag?

Fink, a former college debate champion, employs the Socratic Method in his teaching, guiding discussion and pushing students on the topic at hand.

And during a recent class, he wasnt shy about offering his own opinions. However, he also encouraged students multiple times to do their own fact checking and research.

Fink also isnt afraid to voice his opinions in class about issues at UCLA. During the Feb. 22 class attended by The College Fix, Fink questioned the mission of the universitys division of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.

I think its more exclusion for people who have conservative views or perhaps Jewish views, but Ill let you guys make that conclusion, Fink said.

During class, Fink read aloud a CrossCheck written last spring by Jerry Kang, UCLAs Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion. Kang alleged that posters posted on UCLAs campus by conservative activist David Horowitz accused the Muslim Student Association and Students for Justice in Palestine of being murderers and terrorists.

Fink disagreed with Kangs allegation and his description that the posters were hostile.

Hostile posters. What does that mean hostile? Why are they hostile? [Its] political advocacy and who cares if theyre hostile, Finksaid.

He also focused on the language Kang used as he read the CrossCheck post line by line.

I have a big problem with the wording because I believe youre being threatened, he told his students.

Class discussion later pivoted to a recent controversial cartoon published in UCLAs student newspaper, the Daily Bruin, that included Israels Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The newspaper later apologized for running the cartoon after some found it anti-semitic.

Fink told the class he thinks the newspaper shouldve have published the cartoon without an apology, but questioned the universitys lack of response given Kangs post on Horowitzs posters.

So, if I dont see a rebuke, I just put two and two together theres some kind of viewpoint discrimination going on here, he said. Somebody has to give me another explanation. Why isnt there a whisper that theres a problem here?

A UCLA grad himself, Fink (pictured) said his own intellectual training at the school came from his involvement in debate where his coach pushed him on both sides of the issue.

That notion of pushing both sides of an issue is something higher education has lost, Finksaid.

It has lost the marketplace of ideas because theres only one stream of thought thats acceptable. And yes, teachers will not provide a balance, he told The College Fix in an interview.

As for the fight regarding his class size, Fink said the UCLA administration is giving him a complete runaround.

Kerri Johnson, his department chair, previously told The Fix the enrollment situation is based on ensuring reasonable class sizes across the major.

Fink, whos taught more than 200 students in the past, said Johnsons statement doesnt hold merit.

Wheres the problem? I havent voiced a problem. [My Teaching Assistant] hasnt voiced a problem. Prior assessments, there was no problem, he said.

MORE: UCLA students step on U.S. flag in protest of Bruin Republicans event

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About the Author

Nathan Rubbelke is a staff reporter for The College Fix with a specialty on investigative and enterprise reporting. He has also held editorial positions at The Commercial Review daily newspaper in Portland, Indiana, as well as atThe Washington Examiner, Red Alert Politics and St. Louis Public Radio.Rubbelke graduated from Saint Louis University, where he majored in political science and sociology.

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An inside look at the 'Free Speech' class UCLA blocked students ... - The College Fix

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