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ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ’s Spotlight Widgets
In addition to ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's Red Alert widget and Speech Code of the Month widget, FIREalso has a widget for each of the schools we rate in our Spotlight database. The speech code widget features ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's iconic traffic light graphic indicating a Spotlight rating of red, yellow, or green. The colored lights represent the extent to which the school's policies protect freedom of speech. (For more information on ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's rating system, click here; for more information on ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's widgets, click here.)
To add the widget for your school to your website, here's all you need to do:
- Visit thefire.org/spotlight and select your school by state, region, or just by typing it into the search box.
- When your school's page comes up, look on the right sidebar to see the widget for that particular school. Below it is a box with some text in it-select it all and copy it to the clipboard.
- Go to your blog or website, and paste in the text wherever you want the widget to appear (it's made for a sidebar, but should work anywhere).
- Send us a link to your site with the widget posted on it, your mailing address and your t-shirt size.
Then we'll send you a free FIREt-shirt!
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ.
Can the Pentagon strip Mark Kelly’s rank over speech?
SecDef Hegseth says the Pentagon may dock Senator Kelly’s rank and pension after Kelly publicly reminded troops not to follow illegal orders. But the First Amendment says otherwise.
Texas A&M to philosophy professor: Nix Plato or be reassigned
Texas A&M philosophy professor Martin Peterson has a choice: Drop readings related to race and gender — including ones by Plato — from his course, or face reassignment.
Morgan State says cut the cameras, stop the presses
Morgan State muzzles its own student press, banning interviews with faculty and filming in public spaces unless admins say otherwise. But that's placing a prior restraint on the fourth estate, and a violation of the First Amendment.
The worst of both worlds for campus free speech
The biggest threat to speech used to come from within higher ed. Now it’s the government.