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Academic Freedom, Donor Intent, and Florida State

May 17, 2011, 2:40 pm

The essential ingredient in “freedom” is choice. Slaves lacked freedom since they had no choice of for whom they worked. East Berliners prior to 1989 lacked the freedom of their countrymen to the west of the Berlin Wall because they could not move freely. The destruction of that wall in November 1989 was perhaps the single most symbolic action promoting freedom in the 20th century. 

Academic freedom, to me, involves giving people choices regarding ideas and values: People can migrate to the professors, disciplines, schools, and the like that they prefer, and, ideally, savor alternative viewpoints and reach their own conclusions about right and wrong, facts and fiction, etc. As applied in academia, academic freedom allows faculty to offer alternative views to conventional wisdom, ending monopolies on ideas.

Universities in the old Soviet Union were largely mediocre because competition in the market of ideas was lacking. Many say the strength in American higher education lies in its diversity—different types of institutions for different human preferences. Students attending Reed College in Oregon are different than those attending Hillsdale College, or Brigham Young or Notre Dame, but all offer legitimate choices.

One big problem, however, is that in the social sciences and humanities, where ideas (as opposed to the dissemination of vocationally related knowledge) flourish, American academics are surprisingly homogenous in their thinking. Daniel Klein and colleagues have demonstrated countless times that the ratio of Democrats to Republicans, for example, is extremely lopsided—as high as 30 to 1 in anthropology departments—and 3 to 1 in the most conservative of the social sciences, economics. At many schools, the perspective that market forces work to better humankind and that government policies often have adverse unintended consequences, is often seldom presented to students. These students have few true choices, and thus are robbed of some academic/intellectual freedom.

Enter the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation. When it started years ago to give money to support conservative/libertarian scholars at American universities, I was overjoyed. They were trying to reduce this lack of intellectual diversity, to allow students to hear truly different perspectives, thus making universities and colleges more vibrant marketplaces of ideas.

Now a huge brouhaha has broken out at Florida State. The economics department there took a good hunk of money from Koch to hire a couple of assistant professors, but the conditions of the grant gave Koch some means of assuring that donor intent was being met. I think the restrictions are reasonable. The faculty picks who fills the slots, but an advisory committee with a Koch representative will have veto power over appointments that clearly fail to meet donor intent.

Florida State is a better place because of these appointments. FSU sources tell me that these positions were designed to strengthen their already-strong standing in such fields as public choice and experimental economics. Students have more choices as to courses and instructors they take. Bruce Benson, department chair, is quoted as saying the department had a hard-core conservative wing of about 20 percent of the faculty. In theory, these appointments could have increased that to about 25 percent. No big deal, but from what FSU sources tell me, not even that has happened.

Why the fuss? I strongly suspect that persons on the political left were worried that their large dominance as the conveyor of ideas at FSU was being threatened. I also suspect that this is being used by ideologically intolerant individuals to attack a group that is trying to reduce the lack of academic freedom caused by the left-dominated nature of American academia.

But above all, this is about donor intent. If a group of Catholics wants to start a college promoting Catholic perspectives and views, we accept that. If a group wants to create a college that excludes students on certain biological characteristics (their gender), we accept that. If the Sierra Club wants to create a chair in environmental economics at FSU with similar conditions to those the Koch Foundation placed, we would almost certainly accept that. It is almost always when conservatives want to do the same thing that those wanting to maintain a monopoly on ideas scream about academic freedom and faculty rights. Koch wants to promote libertarian ideas, just as others wish to promote progressive ones (including many of the larger charitable foundations). Koch has the right to see that its intent is honored. Not only is this intent legitimate, I think it is one that strengthens higher education.

One final note: I have enormous respect for the FSU econ department, and hire their graduates and send my own students there. One is now on a Koch Fellowship. Arguably the most senior faculty member, Jim Gwartney, is not only a great economist but one of the most honorable men of integrity I have ever known. David Rasmussen, the dean (and no conservative) is a man of good will. The attacks on some of these persons have been despicable, and strengthen my belief that the Koch Foundation (from whom I am receiving no money) is serving the nation well.

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  • 11159766

    Richard Vedder is writing like a right-wing hack. The point for university research and teaching faculty is not that they are hired to represent various points on the political spectrum, but that they should be free to seek the truth. 

  • frankschmidt

    Drivel, warmed over, and served sunny side up. To whom does Prof. Vedder wish to give veto power over his own appointment?

  • eajmtp2

    “But above all, this is about donor intent. If a group of Catholics wants to start a college promoting Catholic perspectives and views, we accept that. If a group wants to create a college that excludes students on certain biological characteristics (their gender), we accept that.” Following this logic, the Koch Foundation should fund a new private college supporting their ideas rather than taking the intellectually dishonest stance of utilizing the financial distress affecting publicly funded institutions as an opportunity to buy support for a philosophy that is antithetical to FSU’s own existence. Given the Koch’s role in supporting the efforts of the governor of Wisconsin to undermine public higher education, there is every reason to wonder why they would want to support public higher education in Florida.

    Another interesting consideration is the fact that the Koch’s initiated the process of funding the two chairs and they also hold a position of sitting on an “advisory committee” that can veto the faculty selection. It sounds very much like they have an executive role in the operations of the university, as well as a fundamental distrust of the faculty. If they want to run a university with the faculty doing their bidding, they should do the decent thing and start one of their own. After all it is a well established free market tradition.

  • 22067030

    This donation will “reduce the lack of intellectual diversity”?  Or should it be “ideological diversity”?  After all, if the Koch Institute really wanted to increase the intellectual diversity of an economics department, they would bring in behavioral economics and cognitive science types to come in and shake up the ossified Keynesians, Marxists, libertarians, monetarists and other refugees from the Mesozioc.  Simply funding more ideologues will only increase the noise level.

  • edwoof

    The article is woefully sparse on details. For me, it would be a critical issue of whether or not the Koch committee had a single veto over the appointment or a continuing say in the matter after the appointment. In other words, is the Koch involvement going to be long or short? And will the Koch evaluation be edited? Or will the Koch report be uncut and available to the faculty? In any event, I suspect that despite the ideological liberal majority, the competition for these positions will be quite stiff.

  • panthernation

    He is also writing as if he doesn’t know what academic freedom is nor the difference between a college and a university. 

  • chuckkle

     Perhaps Vedder can clarify his position on the Confucius Institute initiatives of the Chinese government.  And while he’s at it, how would he (and Florida) go for the Cuban government sponsoring a professor of Cuban Studies under the same selection and veto criteria?  Or perhaps a chair in the Bolivarian Revolution from the government of Hugo Chavez?

    Fortunately, the CHE bloggers over at the Brainstorm section have also thought about these matters with a lot more attention to detail.

    Chuck Kleinhans

  • opentosuggestion

     Whenever a university donor has the right to veto an appointment (and the President of FSU has indicated that was the case, although he insists the university had put aside funds of its own to proceed as it wished even in the teeth of a veto), it is unacceptable.  It really is as simple as that.

  • blue_state_academic

    “Students have more choices as to courses and instructors they take.”

    If the economics department at FSU, or the administration, was concerned that there were not enough choices for students, then they — not an external donor — should have established the conditions under which new courses would be created and adopted. 

  • edwoof

    But let’s assume that they do not have any funds to hire new professors or develop new courses. This is a fairly safe assumption despite the “we got it covered anyway” statements from the president of FSU

    The issue is simply, should students benefit at the cost of academic independence? This is a Faustian bargain. But a major component of academia, the students, will benefit and any pretense that there are other options or that nobody will benefit is an aacdemic vanity.

  • http://www.facebook.com/greg.arzoomanian Greg Arzoomanian

    Ooh, ooh, I got one!  Would there be no problem with academic freedom if the name of the billionaire donor family getting veto power was “Bin Laden” rather than “Koch”?

  • eberg

    The clearest and most obvious response to this nonsense was given by Stanley Fish in the NYT*:
     
    “In short, what’s the problem? The problem is that the sequence
    unfolds under the threat of an adverse action by a non-academic entity…the
    view that university hiring and firing procedures shouldn’t dance to
    the tune of an external constituency is absolutely mainstream and is the
    core of what academic freedom stands for.

    Rasmussen’s( FSU’s chairman) most egregious comments concern another matter. BB&T,
    the bank holding company, funds an ethics course on the condition that
    Ayn Rand’s ‘Atlas Shrugged’ be required reading…What would be a big sin, he continues, ‘is saying that
    certain ideas cannot be discussed.’ No, the sin is to insist that a
    certain idea be discussed whether or not it has made its academic way
    because a few disappointed outsiders are willing to spend big bucks to
    get it inside. If, in the judgment of an instructor, ‘Atlas Shrugged’
    will contribute to a student’s understanding of a course’s subject,
    there is every reason to assign it. But if assigning ‘Atlas Shrugged’
    is the price for the receiving of monies and the university pays that
    price, it has indeed sold its soul.” 

    It is chilling indeed that Vedder and others are apparently quite open to such transactions.

    *http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/16/sex-the-koch-brothers-and-academic-freedom/?ref=opinion

  • jffoster

    Indeed. I often agree with Vedder but I think he needs think this one through a bit more. What if a rich donor wanted to endow a chair and course in Flat Eathery in the Geography Department?  And particularly in the period before we had photos from high enough to show the Earth’s curvature?  On what principle would Vedder object to this? 

  • fsu_english

    “Why the fuss?” Well, we could start with the principle that even in America some things ought not be for sale….

  • 20ahabs

    Hunh.  I reckon all Latin Americans do look the same, since, you know, Evo Morales would actually be the one to hand out your hypothetical “chair in the Bolivarian Revolution.”  Hugo Chavez is Venezuelan, after all.

  • frankschmidt

    Presumably Prof. Vedder would be in favor of Western Ontario, or for that matter, Florida State or his own institution, accepting funds from Muslim-advocacy organizations, even those whom others think are linked to terrorism.

    http://chronicle.com/blogs/global/faculty-raise-questions-about-funds-for-islamic-studies-chair-in-canada/29642

    Prof. Vedder?

  • 11159766

     But, edwoof, the students will NOT benefit if they are simply subject to the sort of pre-digested “conservatism” sponsored by the Kochs. That’s propaganda, not education.

  • jffoster

     I certainly understand the difference between a college and a university and I rather imagine Professor Vedder does too.  But I don’t see how he writing suggests that he doesn’t. For those of us less perceptive, could you please elaborate on that a bit?

  • gammapoint

     No organization, especially political organizations, should ever get veto power over faculty appointments at any university. It doesn’t matter what side of the political spectrum they fall on. Those who support this type of behavior have absolutely no idea, nor do they appreciate, what academic freedom means.

  • chuckkle

    Sorry, 20ahabs: no Cuban cigar for you. Look up “Bolivarian Revolution” on Wikipedia.
    “The “Bolivarian Revolution” refers to a leftist social movement and political process in Venezuela led by Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, the founder of the Fifth Republic Movement (replaced by the United Socialist Party of Venezuela in 2007). The “Bolivarian Revolution” is named after Simón Bolívar, an early 19th century Venezuelan and Latin American revolutionary leader, prominent in the Spanish American wars of independence in achieving the independence of most of northern Latin America from Spanish rule. According to Chávez and other supporters, the “Bolivarian Revolution” seeks to build a mass movement to implementBolivarianism - popular democracy, economic independence, equitable distribution of revenues, and an end topolitical corruption - in Venezuela. They interpret Bolívar’s ideas from a socialist perspective.”  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivarian_revolution

    Chuck Kleinhans

  • cottontails

    Academic freedom = freedom to teach + freedom to learn. Where is the “freedom to teach” portion of the equation in a situation where faculty are hired under conditions that must abide by “donor intent”? I would not agree with this situation were it a conservative donor group OR a liberal one.

  • panthernation

    He writes: ” If a group of Catholics wants to start a college promoting Catholic perspectives and views, we accept that. If a group wants to create a college that excludes students on certain biological characteristics (their gender), we accept that.” That is true. If a (private) college creates certain entrance requirements, they are allowed to do so. He then tries to conflate that with decisions made about hiring faculty based on criteria established only for specific lines or academic departments. His next statement is about the funding for a position funded by the Sierra Club in environmental ethics within a department in a university. He seems to assume that since private COLLEGES have unique hiring practices, it is ok for departments and colleges within a UNIVERSITY to have unique hiring practices.

    There is a kinder reading of his argument. But, if one accepts the kinder reading, the argument then makes even less sense on this issue. 

    Finally, why can he not provide an example of where other groups have so much influence on hiring practices? His claim is that IF the Sierre Club were to do this, no one would say anything. That is just making stuff up and reflects shallow thinking. (Sorry, making stuff up about how no one would say anything if a “liberal” or a “Muslim” or a “minority”  did the same thing is one of my pet peeves. PROVE it rather than making stuff up.)

  • missoularedhead

     If George Soros put up money to hire these professors, and retained hiring/firing privileges, and maintained requirements for what was taught, I’d have a problem with it, too. This is not about liberals vs. conservatives, this is about someone unqualified to make such decisions making them. The Koch brothers can endow a chair, and specify that that chair accept the conservative view of economics (just as Soros could require the liberal view) but dictating books and course content? I find that disturbing, from ANY stripe.

  • jffoster

    I see where you got it, but I think it’s a stretch.  You might have a better case, maybe not much but some, suggesting Vedder confounds private with public.  Of course private universities, or colleges within private universities, or departments within colleges within universities,  can have “unique” hiring and admissions practices.  Princeton U for instance was all male (sex, not gender)  until 1967 or somewhen thenabouts.  

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1206071477 Tenney Naumer

    You were “overjoyed” were you?  The very thought of Charles Koch’s dirty oil and coal money being spent to influence university students is repugnant.

    He could better spend that money cleaning up the environmental catastrophes his company, Koch Industries, has caused, as the largest polluter in the United States.

  • mbelvadi

    I’d be interested to see the business model that can afford to deal with researching the “orphan works” they’re likely to get asked for.

  • 11191774

    Yes, $40 a week in spending money will certainly squash all illegal payments by boosters and clean up college sports.

    As a famous French woman (apocryphally) said before having her head removed, “Let them eat a pizza once a week.” 

  • http://twitter.com/cksyme Chris Syme

    One question: is the NCAA going to finance the stipends? How are the majority of already-strapped athletic departments in this country going to come up with the dough? I doubt many colleges are going to be interested in giving athletic departments bigger budgets. If this thing flies, I hope there is a funding piece, or the NCAA may be forcing schools to find some strange bedfellows. 

  • jeffgray

    So after all the hysteria dies down, nothing has really been done on the initiatives noted (the enhanced academic eligibility and progress standards aside, which are important initiatives not mentioned here).  The only issue that should have been voted down is the $2,000 cost of attendance increase, which was wrong headed to begin with and an initiative that was simply going to layer on additional costs, which some could afford while others could not..  The other iniatives were a start in the right direction, most of which did not go far enough, but still did not make it through.  Multi year scholarship commitments can serve to protect students.  Elimination of foreign competition travel, reduction in scholarship allocations, reduction in non-coaching positions, restricted travel and competition schedules  are all valid initiatives that should have been enacted, and that could have been even more aggressive….scholarship allocations can be reduced further in FBS, FCS and men’s and women’s basketball, coaching staff allocations can be reduced in addition to non-coaching staff in football and basketball programs (basketball programs have how many staff to manage 12- 15 student athletes?), and competition schedules in basketball, softball and baseball can be reduced.  Setting reasonable limits and standards in these areas is not “micro managing the details”; it is however the establishment of more aggressive parameters for an area of University life that will “spend every penny it has” and will also generally digress to the lowest common denominator in every practice and policy that governs the discharge of their duties, if some higher authority does not monitor this.  For the most part, the values and priorities of Division I intercollegiate athletics programs are not aligned with the values and priorities of the higher education, and they will not be unless they are reigned in more aggressively.

  • deehunter

    Yes but 90% of college football and basketball players illegally get $5800(Pell Grants) a year that they use for spending money so you are giving them $650 a month alot of money for a college student.  I chalange anybody if they knew that they got Pell Grants too and it will not eliminate cheating.

  • fallenchemist

    Really?  You think increased aid for the cost of attending should have been voted down?  These institutions make millions off the sports programs and the only compensation these athletes get is their scholarship, so in effect you are denying them a “raise” when the money made from television and other sources continues to increase, and while the coaches have ever-increasing multimillion dollar contracts, not to mention money from endorsements, etc.  In what universe does this make sense?

    Oh, and as far as the actual topic of the story, cutting scholarships at schools that violate NCAA rules, many of which rules are absurd to begin with? Yes, it potentially hurts the school itself, but it also hurts the 32-42 or whatever the number would be students that now will not have the chance to attend college based on their athletic ability. While there are numerous problems with the whole athletic scholarship issue, it still remains that many students actually interested in a college education are able to attend much better schools than they otherwise might based on their athletic ability, or even attend college where they otherwise might not be able to afford to go anywhere at all. The cure might be worse than the disease. Surely there are ways to punish the actual perpetrators of the offenses without punishing innocent high school and college students at the same time.

    Either get the huge money out of college sports (which will never happen, that horse left the barn long ago) or give the athletes their fair share. The paltry $2,000 that was being proposed was actually far too little. These people are putting in full work weeks, risking life-long injuries, most have little chance of going pro, and unless they changed this at the conference they can have their scholarship pulled if they get hurt PLAYING FOR THIS SCHOOL and cannot play any longer. The inequities are staggering.

  • sand6432

    Please explain why athletes deserve to attend “much better schools than they otherwise might based on their athletic ability.” How do you explain to the students who are denied the opportunity to attend these schools based on their academic qualifications that their places have been taken by academically unqualified athletes? Where is the logic in this? College is for education, not entertainment, and entertainers should not be given priority over academically qualified students.—Sandy Thatcher

  • fallenchemist

    I did not make clear that my presumption is that these students who actually care about a college education are qualified to attend that school academically.  My fault.  I totally agree that this is one of the huge issues, which I obliquely refer to when I say “While there are numerous problems with the whole athletic scholarship issue…”.  However, GIVEN THE CURRENT SITUATION WITH COLLEGE SPORTS such as the money the schools and coaches make, the demands on these players’ time, and the risks these players are taking, to deny them even this meager increase in their scholarships seems absurd to me.

    In actuality I would argue, as many of the guest commentators and others have, that one should either acknowledge that the major college sports are professional endeavors, like minor league baseball, or totally overhaul them to get the big money out.  Since the latter is almost impossible to imagine as a realistic scenario, we should quit exploiting these young people and treat them as the professionals they are with all the protections that implies, such as unions, insurance, salaries and benefits, etc.

    Your correct observation that academically undeserving students are given many of these scholarships just proves the point that it has little to do with being a STUDENT-athlete and everything to do with being an athlete that is forced to put up the pretense that they are getting an education.  Again, that only applies to those that are academically unqualified or uncaring.  Unfortunately, because there are so many of those the ones that are academically ambitious and qualified are tarred with the same brush quite often, even those with NFL talent.  Matt Forte of the Chicago Bears, a star by virtually all standards, has a degree in Finance from Tulane and actually made sure he finished his last semester and degree after his rookie year, if I remember correctly.  There are many others that have benefited tremendously from the opportunity sports gave them.  Unfortunately, they are becoming more and more the exceptions rather than the nearly absolute rule they should be, if these were truly sports for the college student rather than sports that happen to be played at the college.

  • darccity

    Why not penalize schools by putting their players into indentured servitude working in dangerous conditions? Oops. My bad. That’s what we already have even for not-so-big-time sports.

    In this theatre of the absurd, then, here’s a modest proposal alternative. A ban on tail gating, limit the number of home games to 4 (rather than 8 or 9 at their mega stadiums), and cancel TV broadcasts of games? And require players to register for 18 credit loads including at least 1 lab science and 1 dead language course each term. Then, cancel spring football practice and reducing August pre-season camp to one week. Force all away game travel to be by bus. In games, double the yardage for any penalties along with loss of down, or in basketball all fouls are considered technicals. Players could have lead weights strapped to their wrists and ankles, sort of like jockeys have weights in their saddlebags. Require unflattering player uniforms, the coaching staff dressed in clown outfits, and the head coach must wear the mascot’s suit. And of course, a penalty on the crowd if any audible cheering occurs.

  • eulerian_ta

    Making penalties stiffer is useless when the rules are not enforced equitably to begin with.  Most of the big name basketball and football programs that make up “big time college sports” are the ones who will be able to avoid sanctions much more easily.

  • jeffgray

    A couple of observations:

    - most athletic departments do not ‘make money’; they generate revenue, sometimes significant revenue, but they also generate significant expense, which in the vast majority of cases exceeds their revenue; last year, fewer than 20 athletic programs in this country generated a net positive revenue variance (I believe the number was 14, which was up from fewer than 10 the year prior);

    - student athletes already get paid; they receive a scholarship in exchange for the decision they freely make to participate in a sport they like and are proficient at; and full scholarship student athletes enjoy a benefit that most ordinary students do not receive, at a time when cost, access, affordability and debt are paramount issues in higher education; moreover, they also receive annual ‘raises’, in the form of the increased value of their scholarships, as tuition, room and board rates rise annually, on average btw 3-6%, which is at least on par with if not better than most full time non-profit sector employees; most students do not enjoy commensurate increases in their financial aid packages, and have to bear the burden of the increased annual costs;

    - scholarship reductions: football programs do not need 85 and 63 respectively to operate, and basketball programs do not need 15 and 13 respectively: on a basketball team, about 8 student athletes on average see significant and meaningful playing time; the rest ride the pine and serve as expensive practice players, many of them unhappy about their role; cap the scholarship allocations @ 12 and 10 respectively, allow the practice players in high profile programs to become meaningful contributors in lower profile DI programs, and when room runs out, there are a host of Division II and III programs that have roster room; and what would stop the NCAA from changing the way basketball scholarships are allocated?….cap the fulls at 8 and 10, and mandate that the others get distributed as equivalencies, at a minimum of .5 per kid..just a thought;

    - other NCAA proposed initiatives that should be passed but have not yet been: eliminate foreign competition travel (it’s a cost and serves no useful purpose); reduce competition and travel demands for some sports (basketball, baseball and softball among them, which have the most demanding travel schedules and some of the most academically marginal student athletes), reduce both non-coaching and coaching staff positions in certain sports (do basketball programs really need a minimum of 5-6 full time staff to manage 13-15 student athletes? and many programs have more)…these are the other ‘no-brainers’ that have yet to get through the process, and it remains to be seen if they ever will;

    - and the point of the article, beyond the “no-brainer” reference that never seems to be the case: rules, limits and standards are necessary, as are penalties, in a world that will spend every penny it has, digress to the lowest common denominator and skirt every rule available in the interest of winning; if people are fed up with this, they should do something really meaningful about it, instead of talk. Right now, rule breakers who win are rewarded.

    It bears noting that I’m a supporter of intercollegiate athletics and participation (with past personal and professional experience as an athlete, parent and now a senior manager/supervisor), and believe it contributes in important ways to  the college experience for students and communities; it’s just something that needs to be kept in balance and perspective, with priorities in order, which is not the case now at the Division I level. 
     

  • fallenchemist

    Your comments would make sense if intercollegiate football and basketball were still more like club sports, but they are far from it.  If they are truly getting “paid” then the more talented athletes should be able to get a higher “salary” than the less talented ones, and they ought to be able to form unions, negotiate, and have other rights given to workers that get paid.  But oh wait, the NCAA doesn’t allow that, do they?  That is the farce, while the schools and the coaches rake in millions.  And don’t forget that as of now an athlete that is injured to the point of not being able to make the team any longer loses that scholarship.  Sure, that’s really fair.

    If schools other than the 14 you mention were truly losing money on these programs, they wouldn’t do it.  In fact, they know they make a lot of money because of alumni donations that come only because of the high sports profile.  These are not counted on the balance sheet for the sports programs, thus giving a false view of their profitability.  Now those donations are a good thing, but it still doesn’t address the enormous inequity between what the players are being asked to do in terms of practice time, playing time and risk compared to the value of what they receive.  Hell, AAA baseball players, which is essentially the level these players are to their respective sports, make a lot more than the value of these scholarships and their risk of disabling injury is a lot lower.

    I have no idea what your point is about reducing the number of scholarships across the board.  What difference does that make to the discussion at hand?  None.

    Honestly, you are an enabler for the continued exploitation of these athletes.  Let’s put it this way.  Do you really think that if there was a minor league system that could make money and paid these players more like $100,000-$200,000 a year, they wouldn’t jump at the chance?  Of course they would, just like most do in baseball.  College is an option, but the majority of talented prospects go pro right away.  It works in baseball because the major league clubs support the farm systems.  Football and basketball actively try to make sure there is no equivalent system, because the colleges are doing it for them.  To some degree just an accident of history that has worked out well for them.

  • facultydiva

    If the Board is paying him to conduct the investigation, then they are his client.  However, if they really wanted this to be an independent investigation, Freeh should have negotiated no contact with the trustees other than information gathering until his report was complete. 

  • manoflamancha

    Smells fishy!

  • trudie
  • jsibelius

    Wish it were as simple as just not relying on spell check.  It’s a bigger issue when the program just makes the correction without asking.  It’s hard to catch a word you didn’t type when it’s not marked.  People don’t really go back and proofread text messages.  They’re short and simple for a reason.  And for all you know, “going to” would have gotten the texter smacked for being too formal with his friends.

  • panhandle

    It’s even harder to catch changed words when you have to look at the keyboard while  typing. I don’t type accurately—any one can type accurately—but I type with wonderful expression. 

  • 22058726

    Maybe this student cried “Autocorrect” when he really meant to type what he typed? When I type “gunna” into a text message on my iPhone, it either leaves it as is or turns into “Gunnar,” never “gunman.”

    Also, most people don’t type in phone numbers to people they text. They usually have them pre-stored under “Contacts.” If this student got away with this prank, look to see it happen again, with variations.

  • Unemployed_Northeastern

    In the spirit of things, I think the article should be entitled, “Dam You, Autocorrect!”

  • jsibelius

    I’ll see you and raise you by one – touch screens.  You can’t type accurately without looking at the keyboard and it’s a major pain to try to look back and forth between the keyboard and text entry area to make sure everything is correct.  Accurate typist or not, this could trip up anyone. (and still the phone salesman looked at me like I’d sprouted a horn on my forehead when I said I wanted a slide-out keyboard on my Android phone.)

  • jsibelius

    Someone should send that to the DYAC website.  They should definitely change their name.

  • Josh

    Heck, even if he’d known how to spell “gonna”!