The Corner

Education

Is It Wise to Get Rid of the Student Honor-Court System?

Students are expected to abide by a code of honor in their academic work, and when there is suspicion that they haven’t, the usual procedure was that they’d have to appear before a student group — the honor court — to answer the charges.

Like so much in higher education, that tradition is giving way. That’s the case at UNC-Chapel Hill, as Professor Michael Behrent explains in today’s Martin Center article.

He writes:

The decision to replace the Honor Court with a Conduct Board certainly smacks of an expansion of administrative authority. Students involved in the honor system released a statement regretting the fact that the “university administration did not consult us — or any member of student government to our knowledge — about their decision.” Moreover, questions relating to student discipline have been at the heart of recent political controversies that have drawn attention to UNC-Chapel Hill, such as the protests against the Confederate statue in 2018-19 and the anti-Israel demonstrations last spring.

Is this a case of fixing something that wasn’t broke?

Read the whole thing.

George Leef is the the director of editorial content at the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal. He is the author of The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A Political Fable for Our Time.
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