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Disciplinary Decisions Lack Student Participation

News Analysis

A recent Undergraduate Council proposal calling for student representation on the Administrative Board has sparked fresh debate on an old question: What role should students play in disciplining their peers?

Virtually ignored in this debate, and perhaps with good reason, is the fact that Harvard already has a disciplinary board with student members--the little-known Student-Faculty Judiciary Committee (SFJB).

Presented as an option to all students who face Ad Board action, the SFJB counts six students among its 13 members.

But students who have faced the Ad Board say that although the option exists on paper, administrators create a culture which makes the choice no choice at all.

"The idea that there is a choice is a fantasy," says one student who has been Ad Boarded. "At one point in our case, we leaned in going in that direction. We were stonewalled."

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The statistics appear to bolster the claim. According to Secretary of the Ad Board Virginia L. Mackay-Smith '78, the SFJB has tried just one case in its nine-year history.

The Process

In 1987, responding to demands from the Undergraduate Council, the Faculty established the SFJB to hear cases in which there is "no clear precedent or consensus in the community," according to the faculty legislation from April 7, 1987.

When an undergraduate faces disciplinary charges, the accused student is offered a choice between the two disciplinary boards.

If the student chooses the SFJB, the case is sent first to the Ad Board which offers an initial opinion on who should hear the case.

If the Ad Board votes to retain the case, the student may appeal that decision to the SFJB, which then makes a final ruling on which body should take the case.

One student charges that the this appellate system is disgraceful, setting up an inherent conflict of interest: The shuffling of cases between the boards, the student says, can ultimately force a student to be judged by a body he attempted to circumvent, the Ad Board.

"They will obviously think ill of you," the student says. "It poses a dilemma for a student. It doesn't seem worth the risk of upsetting the board that will likely adjudicate your case."

More fundamentally, critics of the process say that Ad Boarded students are advised by senior tutors or first-year deans who are uniformly biased in their recommendations.

These administrators, who themselves sit on the Ad Board, tend to recommend the Ad Board almost exclusively, students charge.

"I chose the Ad Board because my senior tutor said there is no reason why it would be unprecedented," says one student who was Ad Boarded in a somewhat unusual case. "He said that if I petitioned for it I would be turned down."

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