Texas A&M Faculty Senate Discusses A Proposed Faculty Code Of Conduct

Screen shot from a Texas A&M faculty senate document.
Screen shot from a Texas A&M faculty senate document.

December’s meeting of the Texas A&M faculty senate included discussing a draft proposal for a faculty code of conduct.

The draft of a code and a preamble to the code follows five years of work by three faculty committees.

Click HERE to read and download the draft preamble to the proposed Texas A&M faculty senate code of conduct discussed at the senate’s December 9, 2024 meeting.

Click HERE to read and download the draft Texas A&M faculty senate code of conduct discussed at the senate’s December 9, 2024 meeting.

This applies to what the draft says is unprofessional behavior of faculty members that does not violate rules, regulations or laws.

Quoting the draft, the code “is meant to promote and create an academic environment rich with a respect for sharing, critical examination, and the protection of academic freedom in the pursuit of knowledge, while reinforcing core values.” The draft also says this does not apply to the personal lives of faculty members.

Opening the discussion, faculty senate speaker Angie Hill Price says this would give faculty members control over the definition of unprofessional behavior.

The more than one hour of discussion included members who expressed support, opposition, and being on the fence.

Click below to hear some of the comments from the December 9, 2024 Texas A&M faculty senate meeting.

Listen to “Texas A&M's faculty senate discusses a proposed faculty code of conduct” on Spreaker.

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