@ColoradoMesaU reacts to student’s racist Super Bowl tweet

February 4, 2014 1:43 pm Published by Leave your thoughts

CMU joined the trending Broncos and Seahawks on Super Bowl Sunday after a student allegedly posted a racist and derogatory tweet.

After Richard Sherman’s ankle injury early in the fourth quarter, a tweet appeared on the student in question’s feed at 6:28 p.m., “Sherman injured? Good you f****ing n*****. #seahawkss***c****.”

Nearly an hour after the initial tweet, users began replying. At 8:16 p.m. a reply was sent tagging CMU, “Dear @ColoradoMesaU, you might be interested in what your student thinks of black athletes.”

Within the hour CMU became aware of the incident and issued a response.

“Initially we thought that it was just an internal twitter argument and I wasn’t sure why we were getting drawn into it,” said Mike Mansheim, Director of Marketing and Social Media Manager for CMU. “It was clear that it was getting traction and it could be damaging to the school’s brand.”

The three-part response on the part of CMU was posted at 8:56 p.m. reiterating the university’s diversity statement and assuring the incident would be reported to the Student Conduct Officer.

“The language used by the individual in question is not reflective of Colorado Mesa’s values as a university,” CMU’s final tweet on the matter said.

Around 9 p.m. the tweet was removed and the student’s account was shut down, though whether the student or Twitter was responsible is not conclusive. Replies continued to appear online with screenshots of the tweet attached.

Senio Lou Mbala, President of CMU’s Black Student Alliance, was made aware of the situation early Monday in an email distributed by the Cultural Diversity Board Advisor Danny Sandoval.

“We want to feel welcome and that’s what we try to give back to the community” Mbala said. “We just hope that things like this aren’t repeated.”

Mbala maintained that discriminatory acts like the tweet sent on Super Bowl Sunday don’t just affect African American students.

“I feel like whenever there’s an issue like this on campus it affects the whole campus,” Mbala said. “I really think the administration should stand up as quickly as possible against that and punish anyone that needs to be punished.”

Director of Communication’s Dana Nunn lamented on the difficulty in making judgments calls in regards to personal social media accounts that don’t involve campus activities or other students.

“Obviously part of what happens [on Twitter] is the free exchange of ideas and opinions and you absolutely don’t want to get in the way of that,” Nunn said, “but you also need to protect the institutional reputation to a certain extent.”

Both Nunn and Mansheim hope the situation has been resolved and that no further action will be necessary on the part of the university.

“Even though there are those who are rightfully outraged by this, if anything comes of it, we as an institution can’t comment anyhow,” Mansheim said. “Hopefully it’s a teachable moment for a lot of folks.”

Mansheim assured that the incident had been reported to Student Services, but beyond that, there wasn’t much more his office could do.

Vice President of Student Services John Marshall became aware of the situation early Monday morning and an investigation was launched prior to 8:30 a.m.

“Clearly we take misconduct seriously,” Marshall said. “If students behave in a way that’s not consistent with our standards they should expect to be held accountable for it.”

Depending on the results of the investigation, an appeal processes may be established and the student will be afforded due process until the matter can be resolved in a way that reflects the university’s Student Code of Conduct.

“One hopes that it will die a natural death in terms of being in the twitter sphere,” Nunn said. “I would just encourage folks to be thoughtful about what they send out into cyber-land because it doesn’t go away. It really is written in ink, so be thoughtful.”

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This post was written by critedev

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