Shorter University's new "Lifestyle Statement"

zsdersw

Lifer
Oct 29, 2003
10,505
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http://www.insidehighered.com/news/...faculty-leaving-over-new-lifestyle-statements

During his 14 years at Shorter University, Michael Wilson, a librarian, built a library collection for the college’s satellite campus in Atlanta. He shaped his post as the first full-time librarian for adult and professional students. Then he won tenure, and planned to stay at the Baptist college in Rome, Ga., until retirement.

Instead, last week, he effectively handed in his resignation.

In October, the college announced it would require all employees to sign a “lifestyle statement” rejecting homosexuality, adultery, premarital sex, drug use and drinking in public near the Rome, Ga., college’s campus. It also requires faculty to be active members of a local church. The statement, one of several steps the university has taken to intensify its Christian identity after the Georgia Baptist Convention began asserting more control over the campus six years ago, provoked an uproar among faculty, alumni and observers.

Before the new contracts were circulated, more than 50 members of the faculty and staff who felt they could not abide by its rules, or did not feel they should have to, resigned. Wilson stayed. But when he was offered his contract for the academic year, he signed and returned it, but with one line crossed out: “I reject as acceptable all sexual activity not in agreement with the Bible, including, but not limited to, premarital sex, adultery, and homosexuality.”

So far, the college has not responded. In refusing to sign the lifestyle statement in its entirety, writing a letter to the college’s president explaining his decision, and speaking out about his decision on the front page of the local newspaper, Wilson, 50, has become a somewhat reluctant and bewildered spokesman for the faculty and staff members who disagree with the university’s new direction.

Wilson came to Shorter as a librarian in 1998, after working in public library systems and part-time in academic settings. It was his first full-time professional job, he said, and he was the college’s first full-time librarian for its growing population of adult and professional students on a satellite campus in Atlanta.

He was never asked about his sexuality in his job interview, or in any official capacity, he said. But he didn’t conceal it, either, and he had no qualms about working for a Baptist university; nobody seemed to care. By the time he was awarded tenure six years ago, many of his colleagues probably knew he was gay, he said.

“It was really a very nice place to work,” he said. “I could come in, I could do my job, and that’s what they valued.”

But around the same time Shorter offered tenure to Wilson, it also lost a court battle with the Georgia Baptist Convention over who would control its direction. The state convention began asserting more control over the college in 2001, selecting trustees on its own rather than from a list the college traditionally provided, and in response Shorter’s board voted to cut ties with the convention. The Baptist group sued, arguing that Shorter did not have the authority to unilaterally become independent, and successfully stopped the college from breaking off. The legal fight went all the way to the state supreme court, which ruled in the Baptist convention’s favor in 2005.

Since then, the Baptist convention has selected the college’s trustees. The college became more strict almost immediately: in 2008, Shorter joined the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities, a group of evangelical colleges who hire mostly only evangelical Protestants as full-time faculty members. The climate at Shorter began to change around that time, Wilson said, adding that he would like the college to hire based on qualifications and not on religious beliefs.

The first president chosen by the new board took office last year, and the lifestyle statements were introduced in October. Wilson said he knew right away he could not sign:

“It’s a matter of conscience,” he said.

Since the statements were first proposed, controversy has raged. An anonymous survey in April found only 12 percent of faculty and staff plan to stay. Save Our Shorter, a group opposing the changes, has a list on its website of more than 50 faculty members who are leaving as a result of the new policies. Several departments, including science and the fine arts, have been “eviscerated,” Wilson said.

Few, if any, have spoken out as publicly on their decisions to leave, as Wilson did. Most simply resigned, he said.

In a statement, Donald Dowless, Shorter’s president, said he could not comment on Wilson or any other individual faculty members’ employment situations. “I can tell you that I and the board of Shorter University understand that some members of our faculty and staff disagree with the university’s personal lifestyle statement and therefore have chosen to resign,” he said. “While we hate to lose members of our community, we wish them well.”

For his part, Wilson is aware that his situation is less than ideal: a middle-aged academic facing a tough job market. He’s applied for several jobs at libraries at colleges and elsewhere. Leaving Shorter after 14 years is “wrenching,” he said.

“I’m a pretty quiet person,” he said. “But I perceive this as a great injustice.”

Obviously this university, as a private institution, can do things like this... but it strikes me as suicidal for the university to impose this unless they're confident they can get enough replacement faculty who are willing to sign it.
 

woolfe9999

Diamond Member
Mar 28, 2005
7,153
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http://www.insidehighered.com/news/...faculty-leaving-over-new-lifestyle-statements



Obviously this university, as a private institution, can do things like this... but it strikes me as suicidal for the university to impose this unless they're confident they can get enough replacement faculty who are willing to sign it.

I'm not so sure a private institution can institute a religion test for employment, such as requiring membership in a local church. Shouldn't matter that it's a baptist university if the person in question isn't fulfilling a ministerial function.
 
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nehalem256

Lifer
Apr 13, 2012
15,669
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Obviously this university, as a private institution, can do things like this... but it strikes me as suicidal for the university to impose this unless they're confident they can get enough replacement faculty who are willing to sign it.

The wonders of the Free Market at work.
 

zsdersw

Lifer
Oct 29, 2003
10,505
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The wonders of the Free Market at work.

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BoberFett

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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9
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My mom runs the nursing program at a Christian college and had to sign one of these things. I give her crap about it every time I see her.

Sign a pledge not to drink? F that.
 

halik

Lifer
Oct 10, 2000
25,696
1
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http://www.insidehighered.com/news/...faculty-leaving-over-new-lifestyle-statements



Obviously this university, as a private institution, can do things like this... but it strikes me as suicidal for the university to impose this unless they're confident they can get enough replacement faculty who are willing to sign it.

They're small christian university in the deep south, not going after the far right religious fundies would be suicidal to them. Not sure how is this surprising, their niche is charging ivy-league tuition for mediocre eduction with a jesus twist to it.
 

zsdersw

Lifer
Oct 29, 2003
10,505
2
0
They're small christian university in the deep south, not going after the far right religious fundies would be suicidal to them. Not sure how is this surprising, their niche is charging ivy-league tuition for mediocre eduction with a jesus twist to it.

How so? Are they facing a lack of students because they didn't have a lifestyle statement before? Having to replace up to all but 12% of your staff seems like a big move to correct a problem that doesn't exist.
 

halik

Lifer
Oct 10, 2000
25,696
1
81
How so? Are they facing a lack of students because they didn't have a lifestyle statement before? Having to replace up to all but 12% of your staff seems like a big move to correct a problem that doesn't exist.

I'm assuming because the very religious parents needed to be convinced they will out-Jesus all the other shitty schools that need their $20k a semester. They're in business to make money and Jesus-kids, presumably they wouldn't do it if it was against their self interest.
 

jackschmittusa

Diamond Member
Apr 16, 2003
5,972
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Another example of "We only accept our own kind. All others are undesirable". Just what Jesus would do I guess.
 

werepossum

Elite Member
Jul 10, 2006
29,873
463
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My mom runs the nursing program at a Christian college and had to sign one of these things. I give her crap about it every time I see her.

Sign a pledge not to drink? F that.
"In my defense, I was drunk when I signed that."

This is why I prefer Methodists over Baptists; they'll speak to you in the liquor store.

Glad to know integrity is still out there.
Way, way out there.

I really have no problem with this. It would be a deal-breaker for me to work there or attend that school though.
 

the DRIZZLE

Platinum Member
Sep 6, 2007
2,956
1
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If a bunch of idiots want to make being an idiot a condition of employment at their idiot institution that's fine with me.
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
670
126
I'm fine with this. If religion-based institutions want to enforce their faith-based intolerance it's their right, and then it's the right of more tolerant citizens to stop supporting them.
 

Throckmorton

Lifer
Aug 23, 2007
16,829
3
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Baptists believe being gay is a sin, which makes sense because they believe in the Bible literally... It's their religion and none of our business just like gay guys getting married is none of our business.
 

sactoking

Diamond Member
Sep 24, 2007
7,649
2,925
136
I wonder if Wilson knows that by crossing out the line on the contract that it is essentially void and he is now an at-will employee?
 

jackstar7

Lifer
Jun 26, 2009
11,679
1,944
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Sweet Christmas... do people think I support the pledge? I'm supporting the people who are willing to quit over it.

Integrity, Suckas.
 

PokerGuy

Lifer
Jul 2, 2005
13,650
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Seems like a bunch of extreme fundies, but hey, if that's how they want to run their place I don't have an issue with it. Don't like it, don't work there. I sure wouldn't.
 

BoberFett

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
37,562
9
81
This is the religious right's vision for America.

Why would you or anyone who doesn't agree with their beliefs want to work there anyway? How is this an affront to you? "Liberals" like to call "conversatives" moral busybodies but they're just as bad. "Conservatives" want to tell people how to behave, "liberals" want to tell other people how not to behave. Two sides of the same authoritarian coin.