The left is angry (aren’t they always?) because Oklahoma University has suspended one of its professors. Why was he suspended? He gave an assignment to his class on transgenderism. The assignment was a 650-word essay reacting to an article about how people are perceived based on societal expectations of gender.

In her essay, Samantha Fulnecky argued that traditional gender roles should not be considered stereotypes. She cited the Bible to support her stance that eliminating gender in society would be “detrimental” because that would put people “farther from God’s original plan for humans.”

She received a zero on the assignment, not because she didn’t conform to the rubric, but because she didn’t conform to the professor’s opinion. The assignment doesn’t even require the students to be on topic or to apply anything they’re learning from the curriculum to the topic, but rather just to have read and reacted to the article. The grading standard for the assignment was 25 points, based upon the following criteria:

  • The paper shows a clear tie in to the assigned article (10 points)
  • The paper shows a thoughtful reaction to the article, rather than just a summary of what it said (10 points)
  • That the paper was clearly written(5 points)

Here is the paper:

In my opinion, the student DID have a clear tie in, so 10 points there. I would have given probably 7 points on the thoughtful reaction, and perhaps a 2 out of 5 for the last point, because the paper was poorly organized and had some errors in punctuation and format, not to mention that she apparently doesn’t know what a paragraph is. Still, that would have been 19/25, or a 76%, which is solid C.

Ms. Fulnecky responded to the zero she received by filing a complaint for religious discrimination. The professor was suspended and the student’s grade was restored. As it should have been. She did the assignment, and should not be penalized for having an opinion that differed from the professor’s.

The professor gave her a low grade, but he was the one who made an error. I was a teacher for a few years, and I would occasionally give writing assignments just like this one. I would grade the papers based upon their use of logic, writing skill, and proper use of source material. I didn’t care which side of the issue the paper took, as long as it was well written. My mantra was that teachers are here to teach you HOW to think, but not to teach you WHAT to think. This professor isn’t doing that.

Look, the professor asked for a paper on students’ opinions. An opinion piece is just that- an opinion that isn’t based in facts. Some things just aren’t meant to be based upon facts. Some arguments are intractable – issues of personal taste or the subjective importance of certain values cannot be resolved empirically. In an argument like that, once both sides have expressed themselves as clearly as possible, if there is still no agreement then there is nothing left to do but acknowledge there is a disagreement, and leave it at that.

If I am holding a flamethrower and you are holding a lit match, it is true that we can both start fires, but pretending that we can just “agree to disagree” about which is better suited to the task of lighting a candle is nonsense. Had this student made such an argument, she would have been wrong, and deserved the grade she received.

In this case, you are asking students to argue about whether or not we should eliminate the position that a person born with DNA and genitals of a particular sex can be whatever sex or gender that they choose, not just forever, but changing on a day to day basis based upon that person’s feelings on that particular moment. Then you are asking them to apply logic to this, but only the logic of which you personally approve.

This professor deserves what they are getting.


7 Comments

Old Maine Farmer · December 2, 2025 at 5:08 am

College professors would be the perfect choice as the first astronauts to colonize Mars. This young woman could replace her as professor and the world would be a better place.

    Steady Steve · December 2, 2025 at 5:08 pm

    They couldn’t be either astronauts or colonists as they are not bright enough nor can they work very hard.

Honk Honk · December 2, 2025 at 5:48 am

Free tampons from Timmeh in the New Man workers utopia will cheer them up?
I kid, a commie RAT POS is always unhappy.

Ken Morgan · December 2, 2025 at 10:02 am

Far too often professors grade on their socio-political viewpoints, not academics. This is not a new phenomenon, as I experienced it in the 80s, my dad experienced it the 60s.

Georgiaboy61 · December 2, 2025 at 1:08 pm

None of the abuses of academic power like the example discussed in the article will lessen in occurrence, let alone cease, until there are real-world deleterious consequences for those who commit them. Suspension is a slap on the wrist. This fanatical prof will be back in her classroom soon, unrepentant and back to business as usual.

Actual charges of misconduct, garnishment of pay, all the way on up to termination and loss of pay and benefits. Zero out her pension fund.

Lest you think such punishments are too severe, bear in mind that “true believers” like this one are committing what amounts to cultural terrorism with our nation’s most-precious resource – it’s young people. That is simply inexcusible and must be punished severely.

Bocephus · December 2, 2025 at 3:45 pm

I agree with your stance, but I would offer a slightly different grade.

There is definitely some wiggle room in the interpretation of “The paper shows a clear tie in to the assigned article (10 points)”. I would take this to mean clearly citing excerpts of the article, but I could see how it could be stretched to just mean responding to the theme of the article.

She did not reference or “tie back” to the article in any discernible way except to say she read and disagreed with it. There was no citation of a specific line or thought by the articles author.

I would have said 5-7 points on the clear tie in, only because this response could be about almost any article with a focus on gender stereotypes, there is nothing that even peripherally shows a connection to this specific article.

100% agree on the stance of evaluating the submission on the criteria given and leave the evaluation of their opinion out of it.

Himself · December 3, 2025 at 8:30 am

The article at the link says graduate student instructor, rather than professor. I heard the story on the radio box that said TA. There used to be a site that rated professors and TAs. I’d have done some research and not registered for that class, or upon finding it was taught by a circus freak I’d have dropped it. That said, she’s a graduate student? I think you’re right. You’d think her writing style and structure would be more polished.

The thing I find most annoying about all this is these freaks make it all about them, don’t they?

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