More than a third of UK undergraduates believe academics should be聽fired if聽they 鈥渢each material that heavily offends some students鈥, according to a聽survey that found that students appear to聽be a聽lot less supportive of聽free speech than they were six years聽ago.
Thirty-six per cent of the 1,000 students felt that lecturers should be dismissed in聽these circumstances, compared with just 15聽per cent who took part in a聽similar survey in聽2016.
A significant majority (78聽per cent) expressed support for mandatory training for all university staff to ensure that they 鈥渦nderstand other cultures鈥, compared with 55聽per cent six years ago, while only 34聽per cent agreed that libraries should stock controversial resources for the purposes of academic study, down from 47聽per cent.
The survey, published on 23聽June, also found widespread backing for the use of 鈥渢rigger warnings鈥 in teaching. Thirty-four per cent of respondents said they should always be used to protect students from offence, and 52聽per cent said they should be used if a topic was 鈥渆specially controversial or shocking鈥. Only 7聽per cent felt that such warnings were 鈥渙ver the top in a university environment鈥, down from 18聽per cent in聽2016.
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Hepi director Nick Hillman, the report鈥檚 author, said he did聽not want the findings to be used to promote the view that students were 鈥渟nowflakes鈥, but, he continued, 鈥渋t聽does suggest there are some genuine issues here that these students think differently to those who went to university a few years ago, and universities need to engage with聽this鈥.
Mr Hillman said the steep increase in those who would support sacking lecturers who taught offensive material was 鈥渁mong the most worrying findings in the survey鈥澛燽ecause it suggested that a good proportion of students 鈥渄on鈥檛 fully understand academic norms鈥.
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The results emerged after University of Sussex professor Kathleen Stock faced a campaign from students at her institution who objected to her 鈥済ender-critical鈥 views. Despite being backed by Sussex, she eventually resigned.
Mr Hillman said he got the sense that students were so concerned about protecting the rights of vulnerable groups on campus that they appeared willing to countenance some 鈥減retty illiberal measures without thinking through always what the negative consequences of those measures could聽be鈥.
In the survey, 61聽per cent of respondents said universities should 鈥渆nsure that all students are protected from discrimination rather than allow unlimited free speech鈥, up significantly from 37聽per cent in聽2016. The proportion supporting unlimited free speech fell from 27聽per cent to 17聽per cent.
Thirty-nine per cent of respondents agreed that students鈥 unions should 鈥渂an all speakers that cause offence to some students鈥, up from 16聽per cent in聽2016. While one in聽four students backed bans on groups such as the far-right English Defence League, 11聽per cent felt this should be extended to the ruling Conservative Party.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Student thirst for free speech fades
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