Logo image
Ideology in the Classroom: How Faculty at US Universities Navigate Politics and Pedagogy Amid Federal Pressure Over Viewpoint Diversity and Antisemitism
Report   Open access

Ideology in the Classroom: How Faculty at US Universities Navigate Politics and Pedagogy Amid Federal Pressure Over Viewpoint Diversity and Antisemitism

Graham W Wright, Shahar Hecht and Leonard Saxe
Brandeis University
07/22/2025
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.48617/rpt.1407
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10192/74799

Abstract

Antisemitism Faculty Climate Change Democracy Higher Education International Affairs Israel Jewish Studies Politics of Education Racism or Race Relation

This study explores how faculty at US universities think about contentious political issues and how these issues are addressed in the classroom. We examine the political identities and viewpoints of faculty, their levels of political activism, their concerns about being targeted because of their political views, their approach to addressing current political controversies in the classroom (climate change, racism in America, Donald Trump and American democracy, Russia-Ukraine, and the Israel-Palestine conflict), and the extent to which they hold hostile views about Jews and Israel. The study is based on a survey conducted in spring 2025 of more than 2,200 faculty at the 146 Carnegie-2021 classified R1 universities, who taught undergraduates in the 2024-25 academic year. This study provides insights about the role faculty play in shaping the climate on campus, in light of the intense focus on US institutions of higher education around issues of viewpoint diversity and antisemitism and the ongoing related federal investigations and funding cuts to university programs.

pdf
Main Report792.65 kBDownloadView
Open Access
pdf
Technical Appendices1.00 MBDownloadView
Open Access

Metrics

1000 File views/ downloads
1592 Record Views

Details

Logo image