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Race on Campus
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Leaked Faculty Letters Expose Racial Fault Lines at Smith’s Social-Work School

By  Steve Kolowich
August 18, 2016

A controversial pair of letters written by faculty members at Smith College’s School for Social Work and addressed to administrators there have inspired a protest and charges of racism by students. The letters, which were leaked to students by an unidentified source, revealed that some professors in the program are frustrated both by the admission of students they view as academically unprepared and by an administration they see as too willing to cave to student complaints.

“We must acknowledge that social work — like every other kind of work — is not for everyone,” says one of the letters, which is signed by “concerned adjuncts” at the graduate school.

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A controversial pair of letters written by faculty members at Smith College’s School for Social Work and addressed to administrators there have inspired a protest and charges of racism by students. The letters, which were leaked to students by an unidentified source, revealed that some professors in the program are frustrated both by the admission of students they view as academically unprepared and by an administration they see as too willing to cave to student complaints.

“We must acknowledge that social work — like every other kind of work — is not for everyone,” says one of the letters, which is signed by “concerned adjuncts” at the graduate school.

Another letter, written by Dennis Miehls, a professor and department chair at the school, alludes to a “tainted” admissions process that let in students who were not well-equipped to succeed. Mr. Miehls did not respond to an email requesting comment.

In a note to students, the person who leaked the letters said that the language of the faculty complaints gave credence to a “climate of fear experienced by students of color at Smith,” and that exposing the letters would “facilitate transparency and accountability,” according to a report from Inside Higher Ed.

The rift between students and faculty members at the Smith graduate program is the latest example of tension between students who are not shy about asking for accommodations and professors who worry about indulging them to a fault. In the letters, the Smith professors complained that administrators were taking student grievances too seriously. Students shot back that the letters were racially insensitive.

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The charges of racism are especially notable since they are aimed at a graduate program that has defined itself by an explicit commitment to fight racial bias.

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The social-work school, founded in 1918, publicly dedicated itself in 1995 to an “anti-racist” mission. Its website now includes an antiracism statement that details some of the regular meetings, fellowships, classes, and teaching methods that the school has put in place to back up its pledge to “continuously learn about and disrupt systems of privilege, inequality, and oppression that maintain white supremacy, rewarding, punishing, and silencing based on socially assigned differences.”

Over the last 30 years, Smith has been trying to gradually make the social-work program more diverse. In 1986 the school had 286 students; only three of them were not white. Spurred by a group of nonwhite alumni, the school began to focus on recruiting and enrolling more students of color, and in 1994 it created an Anti-Racism Task Force to keep the school focused on issues of race on campus and in the field of social work. In 2003 Smith hired Carolyn Jacobs to serve as the school’s first permanent African-American dean. (Ms. Jacobs, who retired two years ago, did not immediately respond to an email requesting comment.)

Since 2005 the school has periodically published antiracism progress reports that document its efforts to make the campus and its courses more inclusive.

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Between 1995 and 2014, the percentage of nonwhite students graduating from Smith with a master’s in social work rose to 32 percent from 13 percent, according to U.S. Education Department data. The percentage of black graduates, however, has fluctuated wildly, reaching a high of 14 percent in 2009 before falling to 2 percent in 2012 and climbing back to 9 percent in 2014.

‘Set Up for Failure’

The faculty letters paint a picture of a program beset by personal recriminations. “There has been a sense on campus that the School for Social Work administration is allowing the school to sink into chaos and to self-destruct,” write the adjunct professors. “It is now beginning to feel as if, by its own ineptitude, it is now facilitating that descent.”

In his letter, Mr. Miehls, chair of the school’s sequence on human behavior in the social environment, makes a point to defend Carolyn S. du Bois, director of field work, against critical “narratives that the students are creating (and that no one seems to be challenging).” Ms. du Bois did not respond to a request for comment.

The letter writers argue at several points that the school’s administration has hurt faculty by acquiescing to student complaints. “I understand that many students of color are expressing concerns and outrage at how they perceive they have been treated at the School and in the field agencies,” writes Mr. Miehls, who has played a role in the school’s antiracism efforts. “Do any of you understand that student narratives may be exaggerated at this point and that the lack of direction from you is only fueling these concerns?”

Meanwhile the writers express concern about students who might not be qualified to graduate. The letter from Mr. Miehls suggests that Smith’s current social-work students lack talent regardless of race.

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“Why do you, as administrators, continue to offer differential outcomes to students of color, in spite of overwhelming data that demonstrates that many of our students, including white-identified students, cannot offer clients a social work intervention that is based upon competence, skills and ethics,” Mr. Miehls wrote.

The letter from the adjunct instructors also reflects a lack of faith in the abilities of the current crop of students, saying that they are being “set up for failure.”

The person who leaked the letters, along with students who staged a protest after the notes were circulated on campus, inferred racial bias in the language of the letters. Brianna Suslovic, a student at the school, singled out Mr. Miehls’s mention of a “tainted” admissions process when she posted the letters on her website, referring to the professor’s language as “a so-called objective observation about the racially-'tainted’ nature of an admissions process that judges students with measures beyond the standardized, white-centric testing system.”

The college acknowledged the racial critique in statements reiterating the social-work school’s antiracism ethos and praising the students for speaking out. Marianne R. Yoshioka, the school’s current dean, said in her statement that Smith has “one of the most selective social work programs in the country” and credited the “determination brought by our students, the courage they have shown and the accountability they have demanded.” A campus spokeswoman declined further comment.

In the antiracism task force’s first report, in 2005, officials seemed to understand that making an open commitment against racism would involve difficult conversations that would require everyone to listen with open minds.

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“Because these issues are so important and are deeply felt we cannot ensure a conflict-free environment,” wrote the authors of that report. “Instead, we aim to engage with conflicts respectfully and take the opportunity to learn from them.”

Dan Bauman and Peter Schmidt contributed to this report.

Steve Kolowich writes about how colleges are changing, and staying the same, in the digital age. Follow him on Twitter @stevekolowich, or write to him at steve.kolowich@chronicle.com.

A version of this article appeared in the September 2, 2016, issue.
We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
Steve Kolowich
Steve Kolowich was a senior reporter for The Chronicle of Higher Education. He wrote about extraordinary people in ordinary times, and ordinary people in extraordinary times.
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