Editorial
The best thing that can be said about the academic crisis that ignited
between Orange Coast College professor Kenneth Hearlson and the school’s
administration is that it is over.
Whether there were any other tangible lessons depends on where you are
sitting.
On one side of the fence is Hearlson and the freedom that should be
enjoyed by professors like him to stir their students out of apathetic
slumbers and make them think for themselves.
On the other is the college administration, charged not only with the
protection of Hearlson’s free speech but also to ensure the safety and
protection of its students.
Herein lies the fine line the college must walk.
Hearlson, accused of making inflammatory statements toward students of
Muslim descent, was cleared this week of the charges after an
investigation found the accusations were unfounded.
What isn’t up for debate, apparently, is that the classroom did get
heated during the lecture that day, Sept. 18, just a week after the
horrendous terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Hearlson’s acrimonious class discussion came as the wound was still
fresh, nerves raw from emotion and anger. And as we wondered in a
September editorial, were Hearlson’s classroom salvos akin to screaming
“fire” in a crowded theater?
That’s what we believe the college needed to decide. Were Hearlson’s
actions appropriate during this period? Was that the time to stoke the
anger and fear that was already running at an accelerated pace among his
students?
That itself needed no investigation because Hearlson admitted he
regularly makes incendiary comments. That’s just part of his shtick. With
that in mind, a simple warning from the college to cool the rhetoric and
get back to teaching the class would have sufficed.
Instead, administrators focused on a “he said, she said” slippery
slope that fueled protests and publicity from both sides and made college
officials look as if they were not standing behind their professor.
As the investigation proved, that was an error.
Not only did its outcome hardly please anyone, instead we are all left
with questions. Why did these students accuse Hearlson of statements he
apparently didn’t make? What was the so-called “reprimand” Hearlson
received in the form of a letter from college President Margaret Gratton?
Sadly, there really are no answers for now. The only thing we can hope
will transpire from this very public dispute -- the debate reached
national levels -- at the college is that campus officials will find
better ways of dealing with professors who have a proclivity to offend in
the name of academics and those who are offended.
As we said, the college is responsible for protecting them both and
learning how to better walk that fine line will do everyone a favor in
the future.
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