Ahlam Muhtaseb, a professor of media studies at Cal State San Bernardino, said the federal complaint doesn’t make sense, because the university doesn’t offer a PhD in business. It does offer a doctorate in educational leadership, and Muhtaseb believes that’s what the Department of Education is targeting.
“It’s frivolous because they are saying that we are infringing on the rights of white students because we have admitted 90% students of color,” into the educational leadership program, she said. “That is a ridiculous allegation because we are a Hispanic-serving institution.”
About 70% of students at Cal State San Bernardino are Latino, 10% are White, 6% are Asian and 5% are Black.
“So this is natural that this is the community that we serve,” Muhtaseb said.
The investigation, she said, “has a chilling impact. I see it as an attack on our marginalized communities.”
It’s not clear how the Department of Education will conduct the investigation, however, because the Trump Administration is trying to eliminate the department.
On March 11, the department announced it was cutting its own staff by half. On March 14 it announced it would investigate the universities for alleged civil rights violations. Last Friday Trump issued an executive order to dismantle the department.
The Department of Education did not respond to an email from CalMatters, and the phone line for its press information office had an automated message stating that it was temporarily closed.
On Monday, a coalition of advocacy groups and state leaders, including California Attorney General Rob Bonta, sued to block the elimination of the department and the mass firing of its employees, arguing it would impair the administration of student loans, disability services and other functions.
They pointed out that Congress created the department and has sole authority to close it.
Faculty at campuses targeted by the investigation said it has already lost its original purpose.
“The Department of Education has been more or less dismantled in terms of its civil rights and student aid, but has now been turned against the institutions it was designed to support,” said Ryder Dschida, a history professor at Cal Poly Humboldt.
|