Justice 4 Shively
Scott Abbott Letter to American Association of University Professors (AAUP)
W E D N E S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 9
Statement on the Suspension of Professor Mike Shively at UVU
Our colleague, Professor Michael Shively, passed away on the evening of August 19, 2019.
Mike joined the UVU faculty in 1992 with advanced degrees in anatomy and veterinary science. He
served as President of the Faculty Senate and as Department Chair. He was the Faculty Athletic Representative,
a role he relished as he played his trumpet at many athletic events. Over the course of his teaching career he
taught thousands of students in his anatomy and physiology classes and was honored with numerous teaching
awards. Students found his demanding classes key components for admission into medical, dental, and nursing
schools.
Although “Rate My Professors” is an imperfect source, it is informative to see what students posted
there about Mike’s anatomy class. Five recent, representative examples:
AWSOME, 5 out of 5 rating
Anatomy is the hardest class you will probably ever take, no matter who it is from. But taking it from Shively
will probably be the best decision you make. He is extremely caring and will answer any of your questions with
respect. He was my favorite professor of all time, and I wish I could take physiology from him next semester!!
AWFUL, 1 out of 5 rating:
Shively does NOT prepare you for his tests and he does not treat this course like an introductory course. I put in
an inordinate amount of hours into this class and I haven’t learned a single thing. The average score for his tests
was 30-40% and he hardly curves it. DO NOT TAKE THIS CLASS if you don’t want to waste your time and
money.
GOOD, 4 out of 5 rating:
This is THE hardest class I’ve ever taken. Lab is much easier than lecture for most
people, but not impossible. Dr. Shively seems scary because his tests are HARD, but he’s hilarious, with crazy
raccoon stories (ask him about that) and jokes. Taking him for lecture is a good idea, as he writes the lecture
tests and is helpful. He’s a genius
AWESOME, 5 out of 5 rating:
TAKE THE HONORS VERSION OF ANATOMY!!!!!!!!!!!!! It is the same
material as the other anatomy classes just not a lecture hall and the average grade was an A-. This was the best
choice I made. My class had 12 people in it and we all got super tight, even Shively. He is the smartest person
and invited us over to his house to study for the final.
AWFUL, 1 out of 5 rating: this was a very difficult class. When people say this class is hard, they are not
kidding at all. I’ve met other students from different schools that took the same class and got A’s without as
much effort.
A 2018 student wrote a long letter of gratitude to Mike that included these thoughts:
You didn’t just give us a lecture; you gave us stories, hilarious jokes, deep real-life applications and
humbling moments. . . . Yes, your class was one of the most difficult I’ve ever taken, but you taught us
so much because of that. You taught us how to work hard, harder than we ever had before, and how to
be self-reliant. You taught us how to push ourselves to the limit and hold ourselves to high standards.
You taught me that I had the ability to do hard things if I was determined. But most importantly, you
taught us all that we each had an impact and that our attention to detail would be critical in our future. . .
. I remember being so nervous to ask you about something I didn’t understand, but you were so sweet to
me. I realized how much you cared about our understanding then, and how much you just wanted what
was best for us and wanted us to succeed. (courtesy of the Shively family)
Over the 2019 spring break Mike was on the San Marcos River training for the Texas Water Safari, a
260-mile canoe race he had excelled at for three decades. The day he returned he was suspended from his
professional duties. Under the stress of allegations about his conduct as a member of the UVU faculty, over the
course of five months of intense and inconclusive investigation, Mike found it impossible to sleep, lost
twentyfive pounds from his already spare frame, and grew increasingly anxious and despondent. The
assault on his reputation and the possibility that he might never teach again devastated him.
We mourn the loss of a respected colleague.
The letter that announced the beginning of Mike’s ordeal, dated March 25, 2019, stated that he was
suspended from his professional duties, effective immediately, because of serious charges that affected the
public interest. Mike was required to gather what he needed from his office and to relinquish his keys, after
which he was immediately escorted off the campus where he had worked for 27 years. He was allowed to return
only when summoned for sessions related to the investigation. He was isolated by an order restricting contact
with colleagues and students. In mid-semester, his students were left with substitute teachers. At some point
during the summer, because the investigation was predicted to continue into Fall Semester, a replacement was
hired to teach his fall classes. Mike died the first day of the new semester.
The March letter listed six complaints: Mike had violated UVU policy by requiring course books for which
he received royalties; he had intimidated and threatened students and employees in ways that caused significant
psychological distress; his course requirements and grading were arbitrary and capricious; he had violated the
academic freedom of colleagues; he had not adhered to accommodation policies; and he had discriminated and
harassed members of protected classes.
Mike had indeed collected royalties for his required book after the new policy was adopted. He turned over
his publisher’s records to investigators, had his contract with the publisher revised, and agreed to donate
royalties to a department fund as required.
The other complaints left him dumbfounded.
Who, he asked, felt intimidated and threatened so seriously that they experienced significant mental
distress? And when did that happen? Who had complained about arbitrary and capricious course requirements
and grading for courses he had taught successfully for decades and for which he had received teaching awards?
Whose academic freedom, he asked, had he violated? When had he failed to follow disability accommodation
policies and to cooperate with Accessibility Services? Whom had he harassed and discriminated against?
Why, he asked, does a letter of suspension claiming possible serious harm to colleagues and students
include complaints about teaching methods? How could UVU administrators and the lawyer hired by them to
investigate the case possibly judge the quality of his anatomy teaching? Why do the allegations read like a
prosecutor’s grab bag of charges assembled in the hope that at least one will stick? Is this simply a concerted
attempt to end my career, he wondered? And how, he asked finally, can I possibly defend myself without
knowing the specifics of the accusations?
You will know those details only after the investigation is completed, he was told. In the meantime, you
are required to appear when summoned and to answer whatever questions the investigator poses.
For support, Mike contacted me, Vice President of the UVU Chapter of the American Association of
University Professors, and Alex Simon, President of the UVU affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers.
We agreed that I would accompany Mike to his next hearing. I recommended that Mike answer no questions
unless he had detailed, specific information about the allegations.
I was turned away from the meeting after a call to UVU’s General Counsel, who said that policy did not
allow faculty support at this stage. While Mike continued to meet with the investigator and an Associate Vice
President, I appealed that interpretation of policy, Additionally, I addressed the absence of the specific
information Mike needed for an adequate response.
As the basis of the appeal, I cited the statement on due process in policy #648 Faculty Reduction /
Faculty Discipline:
4.7 Due Process
4.7.1 In all disciplinary, suspension, or termination proceedings, or proceedings regarding academic freedom,
the faculty member shall be subject to the following policy provisions:
1) Notice. Written notice shall be delivered personally, or by certified mail, return receipt requested, to
the faculty member under investigation. Such notice shall contain the following:
2) Statement of facts. A concise statement of the facts, conduct, or circumstances reported to constitute
failure to comply with the Standards set forth in this policy, including the names of those persons making the
charges.
Professor Shively did receive a notice, I wrote, but it did not include the names of persons making
charges and, other than the royalty question, it failed to state any specific facts to which he might respond.
The General Counsel answered my email, explaining that “Suspensions pending action do not require
the elements listed in Section 4.7.1. . . . When a suspension pending action is provided, this is not a disciplinary
notice, but instead an interim measure that places the faculty member on a paid leave while the investigation
and/or disciplinary action is pending.”
I repeated that the policy promises due process “In all disciplinary, suspension, or termination
proceedings . . .” and argued that the member of the faculty would certainly perceive a letter announcing
suspension as a disciplinary notice.
The General Counsel further informed me that prior to any suspension, “there has first been an analysis
and conclusion by several decision makers, with my office providing legal counsel, that the allegations are
serious and that there is a risk to public harm.”
I responded that to decide there is a risk to public harm by a 73-year-old professor whose contributions
to UVSC and UVU over many years are legion, and to do so before allowing him to address specific
allegations, is simply not right. Fundamental fairness at each step of the process, I argued, heightens the trust we
have in one another and provides the most likely avenue to discern the truth of allegations.
Faculty Senator Alan Clarke joined the email exchange with the General Counsel at this point, arguing
that “due process means ‘fundamental fairness.’ While it does have legal dimensions which you’ve focused on,
such a perspective when applied to university procedures is unnecessarily crabbed. . . . Would it not be better
from the university’s perspective to provide as much fairness in the process as possible?”
There was no softening of the University’s position and the investigation continued with no opportunity
for my supportive involvement and with no revelation of specific details. It would be months before Mike was
finally allowed to know who made the complaints and the substance of those complaints.
Three months after Professor Shively received the initial letter, worried about his increasing
anxiety and inability to sleep, I sent an email to President Tuminez, new Provost Wayne Vaught (shortly
after his arrival on campus and several weeks before his official duties commenced), and General
Counsel Clemes:
21 June 2019
Dear Colleagues,
This letter is in response to the ongoing case of Professor Mike Shively. . . .
Attached, you will find an email thread with details and arguments about what we see as violations of
due process. Senate President Thulin and incoming President Arendt were copied on the thread and will go to
work in the fall to produce a less ambiguous and more fair policy.
The short version of our concern is that Professor Shively was escorted from campus as a threat to the
public interest (this obviously has nothing to do with sales of his book) without any chance to dispute that
decision. In subsequent meetings with an Associate Vice President and counsel, he was questioned about
supposed violations without having [relevant] details . . . .
How does one defend oneself against accusations lacking any detail, accusations made by unknown
persons? How is it possible that you will issue an investigative report on Professor Shively before he has had a
chance to give you information based on the names of the complainants and the details of their allegations? He
can, of course, respond after he reads the report and he can appeal a negative decision, but shouldn’t your initial
decisions be based, in part, on his responses to specific charges by specific people? Shouldn’t the decision to
ban him from campus take into account his initial responses to the accusations, not to mention his distinguished
career?
It is now the 21st of June, three months since Professor Shively was escorted from campus. It seems
unconscionable to keep him in suspense for this length of time, with no communication for weeks now.
Several sleepless weeks later Mike was finally allowed to review the 31-page investigative report and
two stacks of exhibits. His reading of the report and notetaking were limited to two hours. When he called me
after reading the report, Mike was relieved, he said, but also astonished that he remained isolated and suspended
after months of investigation resulting in a report that failed to substantiate the supposed threat to the public
interest.
On the 18th of July, Mike wrote a response to the report. He disputed the use of solicited and anonymous
complaints. He countered the claim of arbitrary and capricious course requirements: “I have not changed the
difficulty of the course or tests in the last 20 years, nor have my department chairs or deans ever expressed a
need for me to do so.” He complained about the fact that his book had been sent for review by an academic
whose work he had disputed for several decades (and why was his book in question in any case?). And finally,
Mike wrote that he was always open to suggestions on how to improve his teaching. Mike was a teacher first
and last.
When we spoke after he wrote that letter, Mike wondered if he had been unwise to challenge any of the
allegations. Perhaps he should have just agreed to anything that would have made it possible for him to continue
teaching. I reminded him that the mismatched set of allegations had been assembled to make a case for
termination. They call into question your ability to teach anatomy, although so many of our alumni have
reported that your course was outstanding preparation for their careers. Complaints about your book should be
evaluated by colleagues whose prerogative it is to control the biology curriculum. Disagreements between
colleagues about pedagogy should be a matter for departmental deliberation, not grounds for administrative
investigation. By policy, you have the academic freedom to teach your classes according to your best
professional judgment. If I had written the letter, I would have requested additional information about the
decision to declare you a threat to the public interest. They have kept you under investigative pressure for
months. Your mild response is nothing to worry about. Whoever assembled the hodgepodge of allegations is the
one who should be concerned.
When he died a month later, Mike had still not received a letter from the UVU administration deciding
his case. A negative decision would have triggered the first involvement of Mike’s faculty peers—a Faculty
Senate-appointed Due Process Committee, whose charge would have been to evaluate whether due process had
been afforded.
How might this deeply flawed process be improved as we look forward?
AAUP recommendations for termination for cause include initial steps to ensure a fair process: “(1)
discussions between the faculty member and appropriate administrative officers looking toward a mutual
settlement; (2) informal inquiry by the duly elected faculty committee . . . ; (3) a statement of charges, framed
with reasonable particularity by the president or the president’s delegate.”
It seems likely that this recommended process would have led to a more reasonable outcome. Let’s
imagine how it might have played out in Mike Shively’s case.
(1) In discussions between Mike and administrative officers, before being suspended for issues perhaps affecting
the public interest, Mike would have a chance to clarify, to question, to defend himself. If, at this point, issues
were still unresolved, the process could move to the second step.
(2) In an informal inquiry, members of the faculty committee might realize that while the other issues need
addressing on some level, only the complaint about intimidation and threat to the public interest would require
suspension. Investigating that question, they might find sufficient evidence of threat and recommend
suspension. Or they might find that the complaint was unfounded and recommend against suspension. If they
found the threat substantiated, the process could move to step three.
(3) At this point Mike would receive a formal list of charges listed with reasonable particularity. The question of
suspension would hinge on his ability to explain, to question, to factually contest, and/or to accept
responsibility.
(4) If he were suspended after these steps, the following formal investigation would have a legitimacy the actual
one Mike was subjected to did not.
Repeated decisions by the Holland/Olson administration, along with this case initiated by the
Tuminez/Olson administration working on inherited principles, have caused harm to individual members of the
faculty and have degraded our confidence that principles of fairness and due process will be adhered to. With a
President just beginning her second year and with a new Provost, the administration of UVU is in a good
position to rethink how its actions in termination cases might be altered to serve fundamental principles of due
process and shared governance.
The Faculty Senate is poised to address a revised policy on faculty discipline, suspension, and
termination that will better protect our joint interests. The new administration, if it were so inclined, could show
a heightened commitment to shared governance by negotiating the policy with the Senate until all parties are
satisfied. This would be an improvement on the historical practice of regarding Senate input only as
recommendation.
At a minimum, the revised policy on faculty discipline should require that from the beginning the
administration provide anyone accused of misconduct with sufficiently specific charges to allow an informed
response. The policy should allow the accused to be accompanied at each step of the process by a faculty
advisor as well as a lawyer, if so desired. Complaints should be evaluated by a Senate-appointed committee
before action is taken. Any subsequent investigation should be concluded in the shortest possible time.
Finally, the Faculty Senate would do well to investigate the investigation Professor Shively underwent.
How was the jumbled list of charges developed and to what purpose? Most critically, what was the specific
basis of the decision to suspend him as a threat to the public interest? Why, if the investigation revealed that
there was in fact no threat, was the suspension not lifted at whatever time that was established? Instead,
descending into despair, Mike was left to contemplate an investigation with no perceivable end and a fall
semester during which he would be unable to do what he loved best: teach his anatomy class. The Shively
family deserves, as do we all, a clear sense for our joint commitment to due process going forward.
Sincerely,
Scott Abbott
For the David R. Keller Chapter of the AAUP at UVU
Professor of Integrated Studies, Philosophy and Humanities