WSJ: Liberal Thought Returns to Campus The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill opens its new school to teach students how to disagree well.

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Gift Link: https://www.wsj.com/opinion/univers...k51krrrotjp&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

"...
The School of Civic Life and Leadership will offer three courses this fall, including a primer on the American political tradition and a class on the fundamentals of civil debate. Students will be introduced to materials like the Federalist Papers, the Lincoln-Douglas debates, and philosophical predecessors including Aristotle and Montesquieu. The goal is creating an environment where, as dean Jed Atkins puts it, “students can disagree better.”

The program’s launch is a victory over the progressive monolith that tried to prevent it. Many UNC faculty revolted last year when the Board of Trustees announced the plan for the school without first seeking the professoriate’s permission. UNC’s accreditor, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, even suggested the trustees’ action could prompt some kind of reprimand. But UNC went ahead anyway, and give the trustees credit for refusing to be intimidated.

Mr. Atkins joined UNC from Duke, where he ran that school’s Civil Discourse Project, a program designed to create debate among friends on campus. Duke students were also given an option to live in a civil-discourse dorm community, which made respectful debate into its own campus affinity group. Perhaps UNC could replicate that arrangement. ..."
 
I beg to differ :-)
Willl navigating this message board be one of the class assignments?
 
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Gift Link: https://www.wsj.com/opinion/univers...k51krrrotjp&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

"...
The School of Civic Life and Leadership will offer three courses this fall, including a primer on the American political tradition and a class on the fundamentals of civil debate. Students will be introduced to materials like the Federalist Papers, the Lincoln-Douglas debates, and philosophical predecessors including Aristotle and Montesquieu. The goal is creating an environment where, as dean Jed Atkins puts it, “students can disagree better.”

The program’s launch is a victory over the progressive monolith that tried to prevent it. Many UNC faculty revolted last year when the Board of Trustees announced the plan for the school without first seeking the professoriate’s permission. UNC’s accreditor, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, even suggested the trustees’ action could prompt some kind of reprimand. But UNC went ahead anyway, and give the trustees credit for refusing to be intimidated.

Mr. Atkins joined UNC from Duke, where he ran that school’s Civil Discourse Project, a program designed to create debate among friends on campus. Duke students were also given an option to live in a civil-discourse dorm community, which made respectful debate into its own campus affinity group. Perhaps UNC could replicate that arrangement. ..."
Now that BOG has created a shadow curriculum to provide a safe space for intimidated conservative students, it should be applauded for recognizing the value of "wokeism"
 
So Mod-can you turn this title into
We need a thread on the UNC System and the NCGA Majority.
 
Gift Link: https://www.wsj.com/opinion/univers...k51krrrotjp&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

"...
The School of Civic Life and Leadership will offer three courses this fall, including a primer on the American political tradition and a class on the fundamentals of civil debate. Students will be introduced to materials like the Federalist Papers, the Lincoln-Douglas debates, and philosophical predecessors including Aristotle and Montesquieu. The goal is creating an environment where, as dean Jed Atkins puts it, “students can disagree better.”

The program’s launch is a victory over the progressive monolith that tried to prevent it. Many UNC faculty revolted last year when the Board of Trustees announced the plan for the school without first seeking the professoriate’s permission. UNC’s accreditor, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, even suggested the trustees’ action could prompt some kind of reprimand. But UNC went ahead anyway, and give the trustees credit for refusing to be intimidated.

Mr. Atkins joined UNC from Duke, where he ran that school’s Civil Discourse Project, a program designed to create debate among friends on campus. Duke students were also given an option to live in a civil-discourse dorm community, which made respectful debate into its own campus affinity group. Perhaps UNC could replicate that arrangement. ..."
DEI curriculum
 
DEI curriculum
Lincoln Douglas debates, huh?

Wonder if they will redact out some of the more racist lines from Lincoln in those debates. Pre-Fredrick Douglas Abraham Lincoln was very racist by today’s standards.
 

Civic Life and Leadership Minor​


Go here: UNC-Chapel Hill Class Search

And search the prefix SCLL to see the three courses offered. They are all full but give no indication of enrollment caps.

The courses are the two 100 levels listed here: Civic Life and Leadership Minor < University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

I'm not familiar with those rooms...there was always a room in Greenlaw that held 50-60 -- seems like Gardner had something similar. Science Building room is likely large too.
 


Go here: UNC-Chapel Hill Class Search

And search the prefix SCLL to see the three courses offered. They are all full but give no indication of enrollment caps.

The courses are the two 100 levels listed here: Civic Life and Leadership Minor < University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

I'm not familiar with those rooms...there was always a room in Greenlaw that held 50-60 -- seems like Gardner had something similar. Science Building room is likely large too.
  • Greenlaw 304 purports a capacity of 36 (the photo looks more like 24-28)
  • Genome Sciences 1370 seats 24.
  • Gardner 209 seats 35.
 
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And CIVICS


Hmmm, I took a speech class that was debate. I majored in Poli Sci and the intro course, in Hamilton 100, was American Government, i.e., Civics. That was quite a while ago though. (Looks like it is offered this coming Fall -- Stone Center Room 103 -- seats 353).
 
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