June 4, 2003 Provost James V. Maher Office of the Provost 826 Cathedral of Learning Dear Jim: I am writing to report on the actions and conclusions of the ad hoc Committee on Academic Freedom that you convened and charged on June 4, 2002 to provide you with advice on the current role of the principles of academic freedom in governance, decision making and curricular development at the University of Pittsburgh at this point in time, and most especially on the challenges that may be posed by less traditional academic activities in an environment in which the University supports its education, research, and service missions through an ever more complex mix of funding streams. During the summer of 2002 your staff worked with the Chair of the Committee to compile a library of readings on the history, principles, and legal status of academic freedom. These materials were circulated to the members of the Committee in the late summer and discussed at a series of meetings during the Fall Term. As the Committee developed a consensus understanding of the continuing importance of the principles of academic freedom in the modern academic world, the background materials helped to frame the Statement on Academic Freedom that the Committee began to debate in December and finalized last week. During the Fall Term, the Chair circulated a survey memo to the Deans of the University's degree-granting schools and campuses with regard to examples of non-traditional instructional methodologies and programs that take the teacher/student relationship outside the traditional classroom/library/laboratory context. Over the next few months the Committee reviewed responses to this survey and met with many of the Associate Deans or Deans involved, including the Associate Dean of Engineering, the Vice Dean of Medicine, the Director of Field Education in the School of Social Work, the Dean and Associate Dean of the School of Information Sciences, the Dean and Associate Dean of the School of Law, the Dean of the School of Dental Medicine, the Dean and Associate Dean of the College of General Studies, the Interim Dean of Pharmacy, and the Interim Associate Dean of Nursing. The Committee also met with Vice Provost for Research George Klinzing and Dr. Jerry Rosenberg, the University Research Integrity Officer. To ensure that the Committee had received input from as broad a range of interested parties as possible the Committee held a well-publicized and well-attended open meeting on February 10, 2003. During the Spring Term the Chair circulated a second memo to the Deans of degree-granting schools and campuses soliciting information on behalf of the Committee with regard to how individual schools do or would respond to circumstances in which external decisions reduce or eliminate funds that support research or instructional programs within their school. The Committee reviewed and discussed the responses to this memo and factored the Committee's analysis of these responses into the final Statement. As the discussions of the Committee evolved, the group became convinced that it would be beneficial to have in place a structure and process that you could use to solicit well-informed advice on circumstances that arise, and administrative actions that they entail, that may have implications for the academic freedom of individual faculty members, of academic units within the University, or of the University as a whole-the proposed structure and procedure are described in the motion adopted by the Committee at its April 16, 2003 meeting and placed in context within the Statement. The Committee has now completed its work and the attached Statement on Academic Freedom summarizes its conclusions and recommendations. Additional materials that you may find helpful include the background materials collected last summer, the minutes of the meetings of the Committee, the two survey memos sent to the Deans of degree-granting schools and campuses, and the written responses received to those memos. All of the additional materials are in a file maintained in the Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs (currently staffed by Mrs. Linda Wykoff, who provided excellent staff support to the Committee throughout the year). Finally, I would like to express my appreciation to all of our colleagues who gave generously of their time, experience and insights through service on the Committee or through working with the Committee. Sincerely, N. John Cooper Dean NJC:kxm cc: Members of the Provost's ad hoc Committee on Academic Freedom