Soldato
- Joined
- 12 Sep 2012
- Posts
- 11,698
- Location
- Surrey
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-47022374
What do we think guys?
I personally think the faculty members who complained should be punished more than the professor. They came to her and implied that students talking in public areas in Chinese will risk chances of advancing with those members. Though imo she should have reported or reprimanded the members rather than side with them and try to fumble a solution to a problem that doesn't really exist.
Who cares if people speak a foreign language in private conversation. Speaking too loudly to the point where you disturb people is rude in any language but it seems the issue here is language rather than volume.
A US university professor has been removed as director of a graduate programme, amid a furore over an email she sent urging students not to speak Chinese
Megan Neely, an assistant professor at Duke University in North Carolina, said in an email to students that two unnamed faculty members of the biostatistics Masters programme had complained to her about students speaking Chinese in public areas in the department.
She said that not speaking English could lead to "unintended consequences" for international students.
Dr Neely said that two faculty members had asked her if she had photos of students on the Masters programme, before picking out a number of first-year students "who they observed speaking Chinese (in their words, VERY LOUDLY), in the student lounge/study areas".
Dr Neely said that the faculty members told her "they wanted to write down the names so they could remember them if the students ever interviewed for an internship or asked to work with them for a masters project
What do we think guys?
I personally think the faculty members who complained should be punished more than the professor. They came to her and implied that students talking in public areas in Chinese will risk chances of advancing with those members. Though imo she should have reported or reprimanded the members rather than side with them and try to fumble a solution to a problem that doesn't really exist.
Who cares if people speak a foreign language in private conversation. Speaking too loudly to the point where you disturb people is rude in any language but it seems the issue here is language rather than volume.