Florida News Connection
September 29, 2023
By: Trimmel Gomes
The so-called conservative "hostile
takeover" of a small, progressive liberal arts college in Florida is
seeing some resistance from former students and faculty who've developed and
launched Alt New College.
The goal is preserving the traditional values it built as an online institution
for academic freedom.
Claiming one-third of faculty have left or been forced out, Alt New College is
bringing back some of those instructors to teach online, free from political
interference.
"We're most particularly concerned with subjects that concern the history
of Black Americans, the intersection of science and politics, the study of
gender which includes women and other identities," said Mary Ruiz, a New
College alum who has served on its board since 2019. "We feel it's a
worthy subject to study since it includes more than half of humanity."
Ruiz was board chair at New College of Florida when she resigned and is now an
organizer of Alt New College. Some free courses, tutorials and lectures are
supported by donors.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has been touting
the success of New College of Florida and is critical of a
recent civil rights probe from the U.S. Department of Education into
whether the school excluded or discriminated against qualified students with
disabilities, kept them out of certain programs or denied them financial aid.
Ruiz said the concept is powerful and has attracted global partners such as
Bard College of New York, giving students the chance to earn credit for the
online courses.
"The Open Society University Network is making its entire curriculum
available online," she said. "In addition to the offering of Alt New
College, Bard is offering credit."
The concept for the alternative college isn't new. Ruiz said the grassroots
effort was inspired by Smolny Beyond Borders, which transitioned to an online
platform in response to an authoritarian incident in Russia, and Black Mountain
College, renowned for its innovative approaches in preserving its institutional
history.
A listing of the free courses can be found at altnewcollege.org.
Support for this
reporting was provided by Lumina Foundation.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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