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Professor resigns amid allegations, while another returns to class (w/documents)

Genetics prof is out, English prof back

MELISSA WEINMAN

Issue date: 4/2/08 Section: News
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Documents: The poetry of Mark Jensen
Documents: The poetry of Mark Jensen
[Click to enlarge]
Charles C. Doyle
Charles C. Doyle
[Click to enlarge]
Mark Jensen
Mark Jensen
[Click to enlarge]
As the University makes changes in the way it will handle sexual harassment, one professor returned to the classroom this week and another resigned following separate harassment investigations.

Charles Doyle, associate professor of English who went on administrative leave Feb. 29 after he was found in violation of the University's Non-Discrimination and Anti-Harassment Policy, resumed teaching classes Monday.

Mark Jensen, assistant professor of genetics and epidemiology, resigned from the University on March 26 after the Office of Legal Affairs found him in violation of the policy, the Athens Banner-Herald reported Tuesday.

A three-person committee was assembled to investigate Doyle's situation and advise University President Michael Adams "whether formal disciplinary proceedings should be undertaken against Charles C. Doyle," according to documents obtained by The Red & Black by an open records request.

The committee decided Doyle should be "returned to his classroom as soon as practical," but recommended that "all his classes be videotaped until the end of fall semester, 2008," according to documents.

Susan Mattern, a committee member and associate professor of history, said Tuesday in a telephone interview the group did not find "anything that needed to be added."

Doyle was found in violation of the policy in 2001 and 2002.

"The last episode dated back to 2004. There was nothing after," Mattern said. "It had already been adjudicated."

Mattern said the committee "looked very carefully" at how the events in Doyle's case were addressed.

"We think things could be handled better at a departmental level," Mattern said.

Patricia Miller, another committee member, wrote suggestions for those who believe they are being harassed in an e-mail to The Red & Black.

"Students can talk with the head of the faculty member's department, who by law is required to report the behavior," she wrote. "Or students at least can write comments about the behaviors on their anonymous course evaluations. Only in this way is there evidence for a committee to consider so that the behavior does not continue."

Mattern also said the committee decided if Doyle is found in violation of the policy in the future, he should receive a "more severe penalty."

In Jensen's case, he was under investigation for sending frequent flirtatious e-mails and being "touchy" with students, documents show.

Open records documents include e-mails and poems sent to students. He sent one student "poems about her & me & his feelings about her."

In one e-mail conversation between Jensen and a student, the student wrote, "One word from you and this flirtation will halt immediately, I promise you. I feel selfish because I have nothing to lose here, and you on the other hand have everything."

Jensen said in documents he "feels sorry for making [the student] feel uncomfortable" and for letting "his own stress get in way of resp. as prof."

While earning his doctoral degree at the University of Chicago, Jensen "caused a LOT of problems" and was "known as 'gropey mark,'" documents show.

Other handwritten documents describe Jensen as "creepy" and someone who "crossed a line."

Jensen's resignation takes effect May 9.

He will be on administrative leave until that date.

One of the conditions of Jensen's resignation is he is no longer allowed to communicate with students.

Jensen said Tuesday he could not comment because the University has forbidden him from speaking with any University student.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 15

Unimpressed Dawg

posted 4/02/08 @ 10:34 AM EST

Bender, Doyle, Shellman, Blount, Jensen--their behavior has been unconscionable and, despite the feeble attempts of Doyle particularly, indefensible. In addition to the same bad behavior as the others, Jensen, however, has added bad poetry, and for that, university sanctions against him should have been even more severe--like lengthy community service being forced to read his own students' sophomoric, angsty poetry. (Continued…)

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D for Doil

posted 4/02/08 @ 11:31 AM EST

Doyle BACK in the classroom? Video taped, too, until Fall 2008? Hasn't enough money been wasted in his case? He's an English professor who can't spell in his snide defensive emails to authorities at the university, and who clearly can't be left to his own devices, not even on email, because he experiences students as temptations (oh "the flowing golden hair" this, "oh the g-string" that). (Continued…)

Dont you see it

posted 4/02/08 @ 3:20 PM EST

Look you bunch of old Geezers, Don't you realize these young girls are not interested in you! Slightly impressed in the beginning,Feeling powerful later on, Then grossed out by your fumbling in the end. (Continued…)

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RIDERS OF ROHAN

posted 4/02/08 @ 4:30 PM EST

You know that guy in The Two Towers? That creepy guy who hits on the pretty girl and who whispers weird and inappropriate stuff into the King's ear, and gets called out by Gandalf even though he denies it and continues to defend his transgressions through tricksey rhetorical maneuvers, and who gets kicked down the stairs and almost killed by the King but then Gandalf lets him off the hook at the last minute and he doesn't actually get in any trouble and he just runs off to continue being wormy? well that guy SUCKS. (Continued…)

Hmmm...

posted 4/02/08 @ 7:31 PM EST

"'Or students at least can write comments about the behaviors on their anonymous course evaluations.'"

Umm...do we really want to open that can of worms again???

At some level the student needs to be protected by the University, and "anonymous" course evaluations are clearly not an effective or trustworthy avenue. (Continued…)

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Pat Miller's Colleague

posted 4/03/08 @ 8:14 AM EST

What a very very bad idea Professor Miller; you should know better. Anonymous complaints on teaching evaluations? You call that "evidence"? Teaching evaluations are already highly unreliable. (Continued…)

ms.hoo

posted 4/03/08 @ 2:16 PM EST

If they can videotape his classes (which seems like a good idea, although I hope legal affairs approved it first), students should be able to record his inappropriate comments as evidence. (Continued…)

get a life

posted 5/03/08 @ 12:39 AM EST

you guys shutup. its not all his fault. if a pretty girl comes up to you and starts to flirt are you going to walk away-hell no. i dnt care how many kids you have or if you have the prettiest wife. (Continued…)

Katherine Waite

posted 3/09/09 @ 3:44 AM EST

That looks like lots of fun. When I was in college we didn't had so many fun activities.

Sarah Clough

posted 3/11/09 @ 2:22 AM EST

I like articles like this. Great Article! Thanks!

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