http://www.austin360.com/aas/metro/013003/0130prof.html

A biology professor who refuses to write letters of recommendation for his
students if they don't believe in evolution is being accused of religious
discrimination, and federal officials are investigating, the school said.
The legal complaint was filed against Texas Tech University and professor
Michael Dini by a student and the Liberty Legal Institute, a religious
freedom group that calls Dini's policy "open religious bigotry."

"Students are being denied recommendations not because of their competence
in understanding evolution, but solely because of their personal religious
beliefs," said Kelly Shackelford, chief counsel for the institute.

The Department of Justice asked Texas Tech in Jan. 21 letter to respond to
the allegations, university officials said.

Texas Tech spokeswoman Cindy Rugeley said that the university stands by
Dini, and that his policies do not conflict with those of Texas Tech.

"A letter of recommendation is a personal matter between a professor and
student and is not subject to the university control or regulation," Texas
Tech Chancellor David Smith wrote in October in response to an earlier
letter of complaint.

Dini, an associate professor who has been at Texas Tech for 10 years, said
Wednesday he didn't know about a federal inquiry. He referred questions
about his policy to a Web page that outlines it.

The Web page advises students seeking a recommendation to be prepared to
answer the question: "How do you think the human species originated?"

"If you cannot truthfully and forthrightly affirm a scientific answer to
this question, then you should not seek my recommendation for admittance to
further education in the biomedical sciences," Dini writes.

The legal complaint began with Texas Tech student Micah Spradling, who
withdrew from Dini's class and the university in the fall and enrolled at
Lubbock Christian University after learning about Dini's policy.

Spradling, 22, wants to become a physician and said he needed a letter of
recommendation from a biology professor but, as a creationist, he said he
couldn't "sit there and truthfully say I believe in human evolution."

"It's a theory. You read about it in textbooks. I could explain the process,
maybe how some people say it happens, but I could not have said ... I
believe in it," Spradling said Wednesday. "I really don't see how believing
in the evolution of humanity has anything to do with patient care or
studying science."

Spradling re-enrolled at Texas Tech this semester, after obtaining a
recommendation letter at the other school.

Dini writes that he has the policy because he doesn't believe anyone should
practice in a biology-related field without accepting "the most important
theory in biology."

"Good scientists would never throw out data that do not conform to their
expectations or beliefs," he writes.

Dini also says he refuses to write letters of recommendation for students he
doesn't know fairly well and those who haven't earned an "A" in one of his
classes.

Department spokesman Jorge Martinez refused to not confirm or deny an
investigation, citing department policy.



xponent
I Think You Know My Opinion Maru
rob
________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to