Table of Contents
Teaching Student Expelled, Erasing the Hate

This article on May 11, 2005.
The New York Sun says a grad student was deemed unfit to teach and kicked out of his program after he expressed skepticism about multicultural education and support for corporal punishment in the classroom.
With the backing of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Scott McConnell is now suing Le Moyne College of Syracuse, N.Y., for violation of his First Amendment rights.
As part of a class devoted to promoting "inclusive classrooms," McConnell wrote a paper saying: "I do not feel that multicultural education has a philosophical place or standing in an American classroom, especially one that I will teach. I also feel that corporal punishment has a place in the classroom and should be implemented when needed."
He got an A on the paper, but it was forwarded to the director of the graduate education program, Cathy Leogrande, who subsequently expelled him from the Master's program.
"I have grave concerns regarding the mismatch between your personal beliefs regarding teaching and learning and the Le Moyne College program goals," Leogrande said.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Is cancel culture dead?
Podcast
The co-authors of "The Canceling of the American Mind" discuss its new paperback release and where cancel culture stands a year and a half after the book's original publication. - -- President and CEO of FIRECo-author of "The...

After brazen attack on expressive rights, faculty at Sterling College aren’t in Kansas anymore

Colorado reversal on misgendering ban is a crisis averted but a danger revealed
