Young Libs campaign to out biased dons
Jill Rowbotham | March 12, 2008
NATALIE Karam, a second-year university law student, recently changed classes because she was so uncomfortable about the ideological stance of one of her lecturers.
Hers is the kind of story the federal branch of the Young Liberals wants to hear about as it launches a nationwide campaign to stamp out bias in education, under the slogan "Education, Not Indoctrination".
The organisation's federal president, Noel McCoy, is urging students to record lectures that may exhibit bias and report back.
According to Ms Karam, the lecturer asked the class to complete questionnaires, including their names and student numbers, as part of an attempt on his part to get to know them better.
One question asked was to what extent an apology to the Stolen Generations should play a part in the Australian legal system.
Earlier, the lecturer had told the class his political affiliation.
"He said: 'I'm going to out myself now, I have been a member of the Greens Party for 15 years," Ms Karam said.
"Not only did it make me feel uncomfortable, it made me feel marginalised as someone with mainstream views."
Ms Karam said she felt she would not prosper in his class.
"(When) a lot of students come to university for the first time (they) have very little political knowledge and can get a bit intimidated," she said.
Ms Karam, who is also a Young Liberals member, said she was not angry about the incident.
"But it makes you think twice: what if I had said something he doesn't like?" She said although the course would cover indigenous rights, the core subject matter was the development of Australian legal institutions.
Mr McCoy said flyers about the campaign were being handed out at campuses across the country this week.
He wanted a Senate inquiry.
"Lecturers and tutors are brazenly forcing students to agree with their political or ideological views and we want to catch them doing it," Mr McCoy said.
"I think the public would be very concerned if they knew what was going on, so we're trying to raise awareness and get our politicians to take action."
The National Tertiary Education Union rejected the notion of any widespread systemic bias in Australian universities and said the Young Liberals' campaign had been borrowed from a similar movement in the US, led byconservative intellectual David Horowitz.
"The Australian university system is very diverse," NTEU president Carolyn Allport said.
"It is not one that had been characterised in my view by politicisation. We are very familiar with this campaign: it has come from the US.
"Generally speaking, it has been aired and dealt with."
Dr Allport said she was not sure what a Senate inquiry would achieve, "given we have such a strong environment of freedom of inquiry".
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