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Academic Freedom for Students: NAS Affirms Lernfreiheit

January 29, 2009

We believe that college students, in addition to faculty members, should enjoy fundamental intellectual freedom.

National Association of Scholars
1 Airport Place, Suite 7 • Princeton, NJ 08540-1532
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Press Release

January 29, 2009 
Contact: Peter Wood, President
(609) 683-7878
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE       

PRINCETON, NJ—The National Association of Scholars issued a statement outlining its position on academic freedom. Peter Wood, the new NAS president and author of the statement, upheld the 1915 AAUP statement Declaration of Principles, which, he writes, has been laid aside by the AAUP.

 
Wood notes the 1915 acknowledgment that “the term academic freedom has traditionally had two applications—to the freedom of the teacher and to that of the student.” The original German term provided two words to describe the two freedoms: Lehrfreiheit and Lernfreiheit
 
The statement follows a debate between Wood and AAUP president Cary Nelson at the National Association of Scholars conference earlier this month, over “the meaning of academic freedom.” Nelson has written that academic freedom is “the principle that guarantees faculty members the right to speak and write as they please without interference from the university, the state, or the public.” In the NAS statement, Wood contrasts the AAUP “as they please” version with the NAS definition: “the right to pursue the truth according to disciplined forms of inquiry.”
 
Asked whether this represents a change in the National Association of Scholars’ view, Wood replied, “The NAS from its beginning has been focused on the need to preserve intellectual freedom. We’ve argued for over twenty years that this requires maintaining support for free institutions. Ironically, as the student radicals of the 1960s and 70s gained authority on college campuses, they frequently used that power to deny later generations of students the freedom to express their ideas.”
 
In regard to the American Association of University Professors, whose history Wood examined in the statement, he said, “The AAUP has generally been unhelpful in defending students’ intellectual freedom, but if President Nelson is signaling that the AAUP is willing to join us in this important cause, we welcome its assistance. The NAS and other organizations like ACTA and FIRE are eager for new allies. Ultimately this is a question of the quality of American higher education.”
 
The statement may be found at http://nas.org/polArticles.cfm?doc_id=515, in the article entitled, “Civilization and the Spirit of Scholarship: On the Continuing Need for the National Association of Scholars, Part I: Genuine Academic Freedom.”
 
The National Association of Scholars is America’s foremost higher education reform group.  Located in Princeton, NJ, it has forty-six state affiliates and more than four thousand professors, graduate students, administrators, and trustees as members.  

www.nas.org

2009

NAS Helps Students Argue Against the Sustainability Movement
The NAS publishes “Sustainability is a Waste,” which provides ten reasons for college students to oppose the sustainability movement on campus.

NAS Pleased By Leach Nomination to NEH
NAS comments on the nomination of James A. Leach to head the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Virginia Tech Discards Diversity Rule
The National Association of Scholars welcomes the decision of President Charles W. Steger of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University to rescind its policy of requiring faculty candidates for promotion and tenure to demonstrate their contributions to “diversity.”

NAS Regrets Ward Churchill Verdict
The lesson from the jury's decision in the Ward Churchill lawsuit is that universities must be proactive in the enforcement of standards.

Academic Freedom for Students: NAS Affirms Lernfreiheit
We believe that college students, in addition to faculty members, should enjoy fundamental intellectual freedom.

2008

Stephen Balch to become Chairman of NAS Board, Peter Wood to Become NAS President
NAS's founder Steve Balch passes on the torch and will continue to play a leadership role.

NAS Salutes Affiliates’ Efforts to End Ethnic- and Gender-Based Preferences
Well done, Nebraska and Colorado Association of Scholars.

NAS Urges WASC: Do Not Accredit Racial Preferences
Open DOC file ( 33.28KB) . . .
Santa Rosa Junior College's accreditation must be contingent on fairness in its hiring.

The NAS Hails Enactment of the American History for Freedom Program in Higher Education Act
The NAS lauded the passage of legislation, part of the Higher Education Act, which will further the study of American history.

National Association of Scholars Launches Argus Project
The NAS has announced the opening of its “Argus project,” an initiative that calls for volunteers to help keep watch over American colleges and universities.

University of Delaware Could Reinstate Residence Life Indoctrination Program
The University of Delaware has proposed a new program for residence life that looks just like the former program, known on campus as "the treatment." NAS exposed the abuses of UD's residence life curriculum last fall, and we now urge the Faculty Senate to vote against this proposal at their meeting on Monday, May 5.

Evidence Defeats Opponents of Michigan Racial Preferences Ban
NAS publishes an article unfolding how evidence of racial preferences' detriments stopped opponents of Michigan Civil Rights Initiative.

NAS Urges HHS to Disavow Voter Discrimination
The Council for Social Work Education persists in unconstitutional practices. NAS Urges HHS to Disavow Voter Discrimination.


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