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Abstract

The year 2017 might be remembered as the time when higher education’s political-correctness problem moved from the conservative echo chamber into the mainstream zeitgeist, with the likes of The Atlantic and The New York Times weighing in on hostile, even violent, student outcries against conservative speakers at Middlebury College, the University of California at Berkeley, and points in between. [...]according to another study by Woessner and April Kelly-Woessner, undergraduates can readily identify individual professors’ ideological leanings, which helps them to be skeptical of what they are being taught. [...]while elite universities and a few avant-garde colleges like Evergreen or the University of California at Santa Cruz may have a leftist monoculture, most colleges and universities have in fact far more ideologically diverse students, and somewhat more ideologically diverse faculty. While conservative students and faculty may not be widely persecuted on the typical college campus — indeed, right-leaning students stand an excellent chance of thriving — higher education’s ideological imbalance has potentially serious consequences for society.

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Copyright Chronicle of Higher Education Jul 31, 2017