Table of Contents
Social Work Injustice on Inside Higher Ed
մǻ岹’s Inside Higher Ed carries covering the against Missouri State University for its outrageous, ideologically based treatment of social work student Emily Brooker. The case, which was covered by our own Luke Sheahan in a blog yesterday, involves, among other things, Brooker’s being forced to write a letter to legislators supporting a political policy with which she disagreed. This is very similar to the case of social work student Bill Felkner at Rhode Island College, who was also forced to lobby the state legislature for a policy that he didn’t really support.
Those who follow ݮƵAPP’s work, of course, weren’t surprised to see these abuses happen in social work schools. Last week, ݮƵAPP wrote to the federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) about the political litmus tests endorsed by the Council for Social Work Education (CSWE)—the accrediting body for schools of social work. HHS social workers must have a degree from a CSWE-accredited school—and CSWE-accredited schools must evaluate students on their dedication to “social and economic justice,” which are undeniably controversial issues. Neither Bill Felkner nor Emily Brooker fit in with the mainstream of students at their schools of social work when it came to those issues. Is it a coincidence, then, that they were the ones punished for their beliefs?
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.
POLL: Conservatives more optimistic, liberals more concerned about free speech in 2025
Conservatives went from the most pessimistic subgroup to the most optimistic following Donald Trump’s election, while liberals’ optimism fell.
Her grad school tried to expel her for a tweet about Cardi B. Now they’ll pay a $250K lawsuit settlement
Kim Diei's settlement is a warning to colleges around the country: If you police students’ personal online expression, there will be consequences.
ݮƵAPP kicks off legislative season by opposing speech-restrictive AI bill
Legislators in the state of Washington have proposed a bill that would require a disclosure on any AI-generated content.
Politics determines whether Americans believe their free speech rights will be protected
ݮƵAPP’s fifth installment of the National Speech Index survey reveals a partisan divide in the security of freedom of speech and the direction it is headed in America.