HBCU Digest

HBCU News, Commentary and Information

Tennessee State University Archive

Wednesday

31

October 2012

0

COMMENTS

Tuesday

30

October 2012

0

COMMENTS

Monday

29

October 2012

2

COMMENTS

Former Tenn. State Prof: ‘No Need Today for HBCUs’

Written by , Posted in Tennessee, Tennessee State University

A qualified citizen can enroll today at any TBR university without regard to whether the color of her or his skin is black, brown, red, yellow or white. She or he can also enroll at other mainstream public or private universities. The majority of the most qualified African-American students are opting today to attend mainstream universities instead of HBCUs. Therefore, there is no need today for the existence of universities that cater only to one race.

Thursday

18

October 2012

0

COMMENTS

Friday

21

September 2012

1

COMMENTS

Saturday

15

September 2012

0

COMMENTS

Wednesday

5

September 2012

0

COMMENTS

Monday

27

August 2012

3

COMMENTS

Friday

24

August 2012

0

COMMENTS

‘Rat’s Ass’ Email on Tennessee State Grade Changing Leads to Removal of Higher Ed Chair

Written by , Posted in Politics, Tennessee, Tennessee State University

Tennessee Senator Jim Summerville wrote in a terse email to the head of the state’s Black Caucus of State Legislators that he didn’t give a ‘rat’s ass’ about its opinion on a legislative hearing about improper grade changes at Tennessee State University. Yesterday, Summerville, who is white, was removed as chairman of the senate’s higher education subcommittee.

“I am very disappointed in the unfortunate choice of words and tone used by Senator Summerville in responding to Rep. Cooper,” (Senate Education Committee Chairman Dolores) Gresham , R-Somerville, said in a statement. “There is a standard of courtesy that must be observed by members of the General Assembly and this went beyond what is acceptable.”

TSU was cleared of wrong doing in a report to the subcommittee by an independent audit executed by the Tennessee Board of Regents.

Tuesday

21

August 2012

0

COMMENTS

Tennessee State Faculty Senate Leader Arrested During Meeting

Written by , Posted in Leadership, Tennessee, Tennessee State University

Tennessee State University Faculty Senate Chair Jane Davis was arrested yesterday for what campus officials are calling ‘disruptive and disorderly conduct’ during a called meeting. The meeting was called by TSU Interim President Portia Holmes Shields, and followed a contentious period of disagreement between Dr. Davis at the school’s administration over the changing of grades without faculty consent. From the Tennessean:

Davis, an English professor, has been an outspoken critic of several policies and decisions made by TSU interim President Portia Shields, who has clashed with some faculty since her arrival in early 2011.

In July, Davis publicized allegations that school administrators improperly changed 270 student grades last fall. The university said it was correcting a mistake, but Davis and other critics said the school was passing students who hadn’t completed their classes.

Dr. Davis was arrested after her refusal to stop talking during the meeting. In an email to state legislators and faculty liaisons obtained by the Digest, she says that Dr. Shields’ actions are ‘abusive and unlawful.’

Before Dr. Shields’ meeting started, I  had asked her if she intended it to be a Faculty Senate meeting as announced, because she has no authority to do so. She refused to answer. Once in the meeting, she had someone give me an envelope with a letter that stated that she no longer recognized me as Senate Chair. I stated that at Faculty Staff Institute, both she and the Provost broke the Whistleblowers Protection Act in their speeches, and that her attempt to  remove me as Senate Chair violated that law and university procedures. I also told her that people heard her say that she was going to “destroy” me, at which she laughed.

I have heard that after I was removed from the meeting, members of the Senate voted that I no longer be Chair–however, I am, in fact, still Senate Chair because the meeting was not an official Faculty Senate meeting, did not include an entirely correct list of Senators, and the vote was conducted in an atmosphere of complete and total intimidation of faculty.

Please stop this reign of terror at TSU. Pres. Shields has attempted to destroy any  faculty governance that may not agree with her. She has also tampered with student governance by removing two rightfully elected Student Government Association officers.  Her harassment, retaliation, and intimidation have no bounds.

A spokesperson told the Tennessean that the meeting was called to discuss the results of a faculty survey measuring the desire for Dr Davis’ removal along with the removal of the Senate’s executive committee. According to TSU officials, 60 percent of respondents voted for Davis’ removal as chair.

Monday

13

August 2012

6

COMMENTS

Tennessee State Fails on Terra Strong, Incomplete Grade Irony

Written by , Posted in Students, Tennessee, Tennessee State University

The Tennessee State Board of Regents cleared Tennessee State University of any wrong doing in its case of mass incomplete grades changed for students against faculty will. TSU, which adamantly defended against any wrongdoing in their change of more than 100 students’ final grades in introductory courses, was vindicated in the Board’s report to a state Senate investigation panel this evening.

Good for Tennessee State, but a remarkable contradiction in the university’s approach with Terra Strong, a TSU senior who was stripped of the title of Miss Tennessee State University, in part, because of an incomplete grade that left her one credit short of the 12-credit semester requirement necessary to run for the position.

(more…)

Friday

3

August 2012

0

COMMENTS

Tuesday

31

July 2012

0

COMMENTS

Tennessee State Preps Grand Reopening of Hale Stadium

Written by , Posted in Sports, Tennessee, Tennessee State University

The countdown is on in Nashville, as Tennessee State University prepares for the grand reopening of its campus football facility, Hale Stadium. “The Hole” will boast $1 million in renovated and expanded seating, scoreboards, video displays and more for September 15, with the Tigers will host the school’s first on-campus football game since 1998.

Following appeals by alumni and students, the administration obtained Tennessee Board of Regents approval and the upgrades got underway in December 2011 with the demolition of the 60-year-old ROTC building at the south end of the stadium. Work has since kept pace with completion deadline.

Tennessee State is celebrating its centennial anniversary this year.

Friday

13

July 2012

0

COMMENTS

Tennessee Legislators to Review Grade-Change Controversy at Tennessee State

Written by , Posted in Academics, Tennessee, Tennessee State University

The Education Committee of the Tennessee Senate yesterday agreed to hold review hearings of Tennessee State University’s alleged changing of more than 100 students’ grades without faculty permission. Tennessee State officials say that faculty were aware of the changes of incompletes to letter grades in two courses, with approval to do so given by the Tennessee Board of Regents.

(more…)

Friday

29

June 2012

1

COMMENTS

Wednesday

20

June 2012

1

COMMENTS