Looking Back: Evergreen State College One Year After Spring Chaos
It has been about a year since the chaotic protests at Evergreen State College that arguably changed the direction of the discourse on free speech in America.
It has been about a year since the chaotic protests at Evergreen State College that arguably changed the direction of the discourse on free speech in America.
Evergreen State College has announced that enrollment is down 17 percent for the upcoming 2018-2019 academic year, following national attention to protests on campus.
The “Day of Absence” event, which New York Times columnist Bari Weiss called “a day of racial segregation,” will take place again this year at Evergreen State College. Last year, the “Day of Absence” event involved requesting that white community members voluntarily remove themselves from campus for a day.
Evergreen State College announced this week that they will replace their controversial “Day of Absence” event with a workshop on “inclusion.”
Embattled Evergreen State College Professor Bret Weinstein has resigned from his teaching post after settling with the institution for $500,o00.
Evergreen Alumni Raise Nearly $6,000 for Professor Bret Weinstein and Free Speech
In a column for the Seattle Times, Evergreen State College President George Bridges blamed the chaos on his campus on “misinformation” that circulated on social media and cable news.
Evergreen Biology and Agriculture Professor Mike Paros says he is expecting a backlash from the campus community now that he has publicly defended his colleague, Bret Weinstein.
Huffington Post contributor Matt Teitelbaum condemned the chaos brought on by leftist protesters at Evergreen State College demanding the firing of Professor Bret Weinstein.
A Washington legislator has proposed a bill that would strip Evergreen State College of state funding and turn it into a private college.
Bari Weiss, a staff editor for the New York Times, addressed her concerns over the chaos that erupted at Evergreen State College over a professor who refused to participate in a “Day of Absence” for white students and staff.
Amid chaos over an event in which white students and staff were asked to leave campus, an Evergreen State College professor is condemning one of his colleagues who refused to participate and praising those students calling for his resignation.
Mainstream media outlets have yet to cover the protests that have erupted at Evergreen State College over a progressive professor’s refusal to participate in a day in which white community members were asked to leave campus.