Policy:  5:02:03:30

SUBJECT: Academic Freedom and Responsibility

I.    Introduction

The following policy of the Tennessee Board of Regents on academic freedom and responsibility is applicable to all universities/colleges within the System. The statement in Article II on academic freedom and responsibility may be adopted by each university/college, or a university/college may adopt an alternative statement, provided that the statement is consistent with the policies set forth herein.

University/college policies on academic freedom and responsibility must cite and specifically acknowledge compliance with the Board Policy on Academic Freedom and Responsibility (5:02:03:00). Likewise, university/college policies must embody and communicate clearly as a minimum all provisions, definitions, and stipulations of the Board policy.

II. Academic Freedom and Responsibility

 

·         

A.         The faculty member is entitled to freedom in the classroom in discussing

              his or her subject, being careful not to introduce into the teaching

              unrelated subject matter.

·         

 

 

·         

   B.    The faculty member is entitled to full freedom in research and in the

          publication of the results, subject to the adequate performance of his/her

          other academic duties. Research for financial gain must be based upon an

          understanding with the authorities of the university, which is                         

          documented reduced to writing and signed by the faculty member and

          the appropriate academic officer(s).

 

·         

   C.   The faculty member is a citizen, a member of a learned profession, and an  

          officer of an educational university/college. When the faculty member

          speaks or writes as a citizen, he/she should be free from

          university/college censorship or discipline, but his/her special position

          in the community imposes special obligations. As a man or woman of   

          learning and an educational officer, he/she should remember that the

          public may judge the profession and the university/college by the faculty

          member's utterances. Hence, a faculty member should at all times be

          accurate, should exercise appropriate restraint, should show respect for

          the opinions of others, and should make every effort to indicate that

          he/she does not speak for the university/college.


 

·         

 

Academic freedom is essential to fulfill the ultimate objectives of an educational university/college - the free search for and exposition of truth - and applies to both teaching and research. Freedom in research is fundamental to the advancement of truth, and academic freedom in teaching is fundamental for the protection of the rights of the faculty member in teaching and of the student to freedom in learning. Implicit in the principle of academic freedom are the corollary responsibilities of the faculty who enjoy that freedom. Incompetence, indolence, intellectual dishonesty, failure to carry out assigned duties, serious moral dereliction, arbitrary and capricious disregard of standards of professional conduct - these and other grounds as set forth in TBR Policy, "Policy on Academic Tenure at Tennessee Board of Regents’ Universities, "Section P., may constitute adequate cause for dismissal or other disciplinary sanctions against faculty members subject to the provisions of Article III.

The right to academic freedom imposes upon the faculty an equal obligation to take appropriate professional action against faculty members who are derelict in discharging their professional responsibilities. The faculty member has an obligation to participate in tenure and promotion review of colleagues as specified in university policy. Thus, academic freedom and academic responsibility are interdependent, and academic tenure is adopted as a means to protect the former while promoting the latter. While academic tenure is essential for the protection of academic freedom, all faculty members, tenured or non-tenured, have an equal right to academic freedom and bear the same academic responsibilities implicit in that freedom.

Source:  April 2, 2004