PHOENIX — President Donald Trump has been vocal about his desire to reshape higher education — and now that agenda is landing in Arizona.
Specifically, the University of Arizona is in his crosshairs.
On Wednesday, the White House sent the University of Arizona and eight other campuses a directive instructing them to comply with the Trump administration’s policies on higher education.
What does Trump administration want University of Arizona to do?
The document, called the “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” asks colleges to commit to accept the Trump administration’s policies on various topics, including free speech, student discipline and women’s sports, according to the Associated Press.
It came as a surprise to university officials, according to UofA spokesperson Mitch Zak.
“The university first learned of the compact when we received it on Oct. 1,” Zak told KTAR News 92.3 FM on Thursday. “We are reviewing it carefully.”
The White House sent a letter alongside the compact that said signing on would give them benefits such as “substantial and meaningful federal grants” as well as “increased overhead payments where feasible,” according to the Associated Press.
What other colleges received Trump compact for academic excellence?
Here are other requests the Trump administration is making of schools:
- Apply the Trump administration’s definition of gender to campus bathrooms, women’s sports teams and locker rooms.
- Stop considering student demographic information like race and gender in the admissions process.
- Require undergraduate applicants to take the SAT or ACT.
The White House also sent the compact to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Vanderbilt University, Dartmouth College, University of Southern California, University of Pennsylvania, Brown University, University of Virginia and the University of Texas at Austin.
Greg Stanton urges UofA president to resist ‘Faustian bargain’
Arizona Democratic U.S. Rep. Greg Stanton urged UofA President Suresh Garimella not to comply.
“The compact represents an unprecedented intrusion into higher education, replacing academic freedom and institutional judgment with ideological dictates and rigid mandates,” Stanton said in a Thursday letter to Garimella.
Stanton also accused the Trump administration of being coercive by rewarding compliant universities with funding and influence.
“I urge you: reject this Faustian bargain. Protect the University of Arizona’s independence,” Stanton said. “Protect academic freedom. And protect the principle that universities serve truth, not political power.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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