REDACTED USU Piano Program Investigation Report 4-6-2018
REDACTED USU Piano Program Investigation Report 4-6-2018
REDACTED USU Piano Program Investigation Report 4-6-2018
REPORT OF INVESTIGATION
SUMMARY
On February 15, 2018, Utah State University retained Snell & Wilmer to conduct an
independent investigation of the facts behind a series of social media posts appearing a few days
earlier. In these posts, several former students of the University’s Piano Program wrote that
current and former faculty members engaged in sexual harassment and gender discrimination
over a lengthy period beginning in the late 1990s. The posts also claimed or suggested that
current and former faculty members had sexually assaulted students. On behalf of the
University, President Noelle E. Cockett and General Counsel Mica McKinney asked Snell &
Wilmer investigators to gather and evaluate the facts behind these allegations and to evaluate the
University’s responses where the allegations had been reported to University officials. They also
asked the investigators to make recommendations for change in the event serious misconduct
occurred.
Snell & Wilmer conducted a month-long investigation, and the results are presented in
this report. In summary we conclude:
Gender discrimination – More than a dozen current and former students complained of a
pervasive culture of gender discrimination in the Piano Program. The events that prompted these
complaints started in the late 1990s and continued until 2017. Some of the students’ complaints
of discrimination were corroborated by information from other current and former students, from
faculty members, from administrators with personal knowledge, and from the University’s
records. The complaints stemmed, in significant part, from the attitudes and behavior of
Professor Gary Amano, who was until 2017 the coordinator of the Piano Program. Since
Professor Amano began his sabbatical in August 2017, the Program has made progress in
correcting the problem of gender discrimination. Unfortunately, until mid-2017, the University’s
Music Department and Title IX office did little to address the problem despite repeated
opportunities to confront Professor Amano and respond to complaints. Former students told us
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that in many instances they chose not to report what they believed to be discrimination because
they thought it would not have done any good, they were intimidated, and they feared retaliation.
Sexual harassment and sexual assaults – Between 1994 and 2012, students or parents
complained to responsible University officials of a series of incidents involving sexual
harassment by four members of the Music Department faculty. The complainants were both
males and females. Some of the incidents reportedly involved unwelcome sexual advances and
sexual relations between faculty members and the students they taught; some complaints
involved alleged sexual assault. One of the accused – a former faculty member of the Piano
Program – has admitted to having repeated sexual relations with at least three female students in
the Piano Program during the late 2000s, but he claims that all of them were consensual.
Whether consensual or not, however, a disturbing pattern emerges from all of these incidents:
some of them appear to have been common knowledge at the time, but none of them appears to
have been taken seriously by the leadership of the Piano Program or the University. In several
instances, the only party to be criticized was the victim. Two of the faculty members accused of
harassment no longer teach at the University; the other two are still on the faculty. To these
investigators, the incidents demonstrate, at the very least, a persistent bias against women and a
serious lack of faculty supervision and discipline. They also demonstrate that Piano Program
faculty and Music Department leadership were for years unwilling to confront sexual harassment
offenders concerning their misconduct.
Humiliation, intimidation, and vindictiveness – Although not squarely within the scope
of our investigation, we feel we must report that for decades the Piano Program tolerated
psychologically abusive faculty behavior – behavior that drove some students to leave the
program without degrees, giving up the piano altogether, and other students to contend with
abuse until they graduated. It is true that many students with whom we spoke had no complaints
about the Piano Program and denied having any knowledge of any faculty misconduct. It is also
true that many of his current and former students revere Professor Amano. But a significant
number of current and former students complained to us about having been humiliated – or
watching others being humiliated and belittled – in classes taught by him and other faculty.
They complained about faculty vindictiveness. They also complained that faculty members, and
particularly Professor Amano, became impatient and caustic with students for having failed to
grasp concepts or comply with expectations – concepts and expectations the faculty never clearly
explained in the first place. For these students, the Piano Program was, as several said, “toxic.”
The training of elite piano performers undoubtedly must be rigorous and highly disciplined. But
we do not believe there is any excuse for the humiliating treatment that some students
experienced. Since August 2017, the Piano Program has made significant strides in addressing
this problem.
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BACKGROUND
For many years, the University has been proud of the Music Department’s Piano
Program, widely recognized as one of the best in the nation. From the 1980s to August 2017,
Professor Gary Amano led the Piano Program. He is a Julliard-trained pianist and teacher, and
many of his former students have gone on to distinguished performing and academic careers. He
is recognized by knowledgeable people as a superb teacher of gifted students. Other current
members of the Piano Program faculty are Professors Dennis Hirst, Kevin Olson, and Emily
Ezola. During Professor Amano’s current sabbatical, Jason Hardink has filled in for him in
teaching Program students. Mr. Hardink is Principal Symphony Keyboard of the Utah
Symphony and Artistic Director of the NOVA Chamber Music Series.
The Piano Program offers majors in Piano Performance and Piano Pedagogy, and since
2008 it has offered a Masters of Music degree. Undergraduates are admitted to the Program
based on an audition, and those admitted are placed into the “studio” of one of the Program’s
faculty members for individual and small-group lessons. Historically, the most promising
students were placed in Professor Amano’s studio, and the rest were placed in another faculty
member’s studio. Students in Professor Amano’s studio who did not meet his rigorous standards
were moved into another studio. At present there are fourteen undergraduates in the Program;
eleven of them are women. There are two graduate students in the Program, both of whom are
men.
The Piano Program offers two programs for younger students of the piano that have been
relevant to our investigation. Program faculty and undergraduates operate the Youth
Conservatory for about 300 younger students aged 5 through 18 throughout the academic year.
During the summer, they operate the Piano Clinic providing private lessons for young people.
The Piano Program is part of the Music Department, whose Head is Professor Cindy
Dewey. The Music Department is part of the Caine College of the Arts, which is led by Dean
Craig Jessop. In August 2017, Dean Jessop and Professor Dewey asked Professor Amano to
take a sabbatical for a year, and they removed him as coordinator of the Piano Program.
Professor Hirst was installed as interim coordinator of the Program.
In February 2018, in a series of social media posts, some former students of the Piano
Program complained of gender discrimination, sexual harassment, and sexual assault. The
complaints, which related to conduct going back more than a decade, generated social media
comment from many current and former students and others, as well as several press reports.
Because of the troubling nature of these social media posts, the University’s President and Board
of Trustees immediately retained outside counsel to conduct this investigation.
One other fact must be mentioned by way of background. At present, the relationship
between Professor Amano and the rest of the faculty is extremely contentious. On the one hand,
Professors Hirst, Olson, and Ezola believe that Professor Amano is responsible for most of the
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complaints about the Piano Program. On the other hand, Professor Amano believes that
Professor Hirst has orchestrated a conspiracy against him and that this explains, at least in part,
the unfavorable social media posts about the Program. On the one hand, Professor Amano
believes Professor Hirst is dishonest and is trying to take his job. On the other, it is doubtful that
the other professors will remain in the Program if Professor Amano is allowed to return to it.
Even more unfortunately, these disagreements have led some students and former students to
pick sides and become partisans in the battle. All of this will make it very difficult to solve the
problems we address in this report.
We requested and obtained records from the University’s Office of General Counsel,
Office of the President, the Human Resources Office, and the Caine College of the Arts. Since
some of the complaints were reported to the University’s Affirmative Action and Equal
Opportunity Office (commonly called the “Title IX Office”), we obtained relevant documents
from that office as well. We collected hundreds of pages of documents consisting of social
media posts, Title IX complaints and investigative reports, departmental emails and other inter-
University correspondence, faculty personnel files, scholarship files, grade transcripts, and
University policies. The investigators also received correspondence directly from former
students and from faculty members.
Federal law prohibits the University from publicly disclosing the names and other
identifying facts “directly related” to a present or former student. 20 U.S.C. § 1232g(b)(i); 34
C.F.R. § 93. For this reason, this report identifies students and former students by randomly
selected numbers, for example, as “Current Student No. 1” or “Former Student No. 4.” This
report omits other information that could be used to identify current or former students.
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REPORT OF INVESTIGATION
1. Gender Discrimination
University Policy 305.1 also provides that University employees and students may not
discriminate against other employees or students on the basis of a series of protected categories,
including gender. Under Policy 305.4.1, a student may report gender discrimination in
academic-related practices and decisions to the Title IX Office within 180 days of the last
occurrence. Such complaints are to be investigated by the Title IX Office, and the investigation
is to be completed, if possible, within 60 days from the complaint. At the conclusion of the
investigation, the Title IX Office is to prepare an investigation report that summarizes the Title
IX Office’s factual findings and conclusions, indicating whether, by a preponderance of the
evidence, a violation of the discrimination policy has occurred.
Many of the Piano Program’s present and former students told us that recent claims of
gender discrimination in social media posts stem from Professor Amano’s attitudes and behavior.
According to these students, it has not been unusual for him to tell both male and female students
that men are in general better piano players than women and that, therefore, performance
opportunities should be given to males. Students told us that Professor Amano tells his classes
that men should get more opportunities because they are likely to become “breadwinners,”
whereas female students are likely to become nothing more than housewives and neighborhood
piano teachers. He seems consistently to have told his students that males are more likely to
become great performers because they have greater upper body strength and larger hands.
In our discussions with him, Professor Amano told us that he has never disparaged
women students, nor has he ever discriminated against them. He points to all of the female
students to whom he has devoted special attention over the years. He told us, however, that “it is
a fact of life” that most of the world’s elite piano performers are men. As proof, he said that of
the fifteen gold medalists in the Van Cliburn International Competition since 1962, only two
have been women. To Professor Amano’s credit, several of current and former female students
told us that they do not believe that he has ever discriminated against them or other women; they
believe their training from him has been extraordinary, and they are grateful to him. Some of
these students say that they are appalled by the criticism of him in the recent social media posts.
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But many of those with whom we spoke believe that the recent criticism of Professor
Amano in social media posts is justified. Based on interviews with more than 40 current and
former students of both genders, with other Program faculty, and with administrators, we
conclude that the Piano Program has for decades discriminated against women and favored men.
We conclude further that the main cause of discrimination has been Professor Amano himself.
We also conclude that until 2017 the University failed to address the problem of discrimination
despite having had the opportunity to do so on repeated occasions.
Our investigation has shown that gender discrimination has been common knowledge in
the Piano Program for more than a decade. As one Piano Program faculty member told us, “It
could not be more obvious” that Professor Amano has favored men over women. Another
current Piano Program faculty member told us that he has observed “a consistent pattern of
discrimination against women.” According to some former students, everyone knew that male
students got larger scholarships with fewer requirements than female students. (We evaluate this
claim beginning at page 9.) A Music Department administrator who has worked with Professor
Amano for years expressed regret for having failed to deal with the problem earlier; she said that
Professor Amano probably cannot perceive his own biases and does not understand how those
biases translate into his treatment of students. This administrator has concluded that Professor
Amano created and perpetuated a hostile academic environment not only for students but for
other faculty members as well.
To provide context for these conclusions, we describe below the experiences of some of
the students we interviewed. We must emphasize that the students whose experiences and views
are described below are by no means the only students who complained to us on these subjects.
Former Student 11
Former Student 11’s Facebook post was one of the posts that led to this investigation.
She and Former Student 1, a male, left the Piano Program in early 2008 without graduating.
These two people ultimately married each other, and one of them went on to obtain a master’s
degree and a doctoral degree and is now a piano faculty member in a respected university
program in the eastern United States. Former Student 11 left Utah State University because,
according to her: (1) she experienced gender discrimination throughout her years at Utah State
University, having allegedly been treated less favorably than male students whose academic and
piano performance was inferior to hers; (2) she was sexually harassed by two faculty members;
and (3) Former Student 1 (now her husband) was advised in the spring of 2006 by Piano
Program faculty to terminate his relationship with her, or else she would be “blackballed” by the
Piano Program faculty. Former Student 11 reported that after being advised in 2006 that she
would suffer the consequences of continuing her relationship with Former Student 1, she was
ignored by Professor Amano and other faculty members, and she found it difficult to find
anyone in the Program who would provide her with private lessons. At the time of her departure
in 2008, she was a single credit short of the credits needed to graduate.
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In June 2015, more than seven years later, Former Student 11 wrote a detailed letter to
Craig Jessop, then the Chair of the University’s Music Department, complaining of the manner
in which she had been treated by the University. In the letter, she asked if it would be possible
for the University to waive the remaining credit she needed and award her a degree. She also
asked if steps could be taken to assure that current and future students would not have to
experience the discrimination that she claimed to have experienced.
In response to this letter, Professor Jessop and others in the Music Department
conducted an investigation of Former Student 11’s graduation options. They ultimately
arranged for her to graduate with a bachelor’s degree without having to return to the University.
Concerning Former Student 11’s claims of gender discrimination and sexual harassment,
Professor Jessop met with Stacy Surgeon of the Title IX Office. A June 29, 2015 note from the
Title IX Office describes their discussion. They appear to have concluded that because Former
Student 11’s allegations of sexual harassment involved two faculty members who had long since
left the University, an investigation on that issue would not be worthwhile. As for Former
Student 11’s concerns of gender discrimination, Ms. Sturgeon said that this student’s claims did
not appear to be gender-related, and so she suggested that they seek the help of the University’s
Human Resources Office. The Human Resources Office, however, appears to have done
nothing, either because the matter was never referred to it, or because it did not believe it had
jurisdiction over claims of misconduct by faculty members. There is, at any rate, no Human
Resources record of any referral or action, and the person who was the Human Resources
Director at the time, BrandE Faupell, remembers none. According to Doug Bullock, the current
Director of Human Resources, his office does not investigate complaints against faculty, leaving
that task to the Office of the Provost. The Office of the Provost has no record of investigating
the gender discrimination claims of Former Student 11.
We have described Former Student 11’s experience in detail because it is consistent with
other factual allegations we heard from other former students, and it reflects a pattern of
reluctance on behalf of the Music Department and the Title IX Office to confront the Piano
Program with problems.
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Former Student 2, a female, graduated from the Piano Program in 2008 and then started
in the graduate program. She left midway through her graduate training because she “hated the
system” and was “emotionally shot.” For the entirety of her undergraduate experience, she was a
member of Professor Amano’s studio. Although she considered herself to have been part of his
“inner circle” of elite students, she said it became clear to her that the men in the studio received
preferential treatment. She said that Professor Amano expressed his desire to invest in males
“since they’re the only ones who’ll have real careers.” According to Former Student 2, his
attitude towards her was, “If I give you this privilege or opportunity, it’ll just take it away from a
male.” She believes she had to work much harder than the males in Professor Amano’s studio
just to maintain her place in the studio.
Former Student 6, who graduated from the University four years later, was not in the
Piano Program, but was studying another instrument at the University. She collaborated with
Piano Program students frequently and observed that “female students received little attention,
with a few exceptions.” She said that the “working assumption” of the Piano Program was that
“women wouldn’t amount to much” and that Professor Amano would not take most women very
seriously.
Former Student 20, a male, left the Piano Program in 2004. He observed an “alarming”
degree of “sexism” by the Program’s faculty. Professor Amano told students that men were
better pianists than women and that women were only going to get married and have kids. He
said that students did not feel they could complain to other faculty members or the Music
Department because they were all afraid of crossing him.
Former Student 5
This student, a female, left the Piano Program without a degree near the end of spring
semester 2004, when she should have graduated. For four years, she was a member of Professor
Amano’s studio. During the course of what was supposed to be her last semester, she became
concerned, among other things, about the conduct of Professor Amano in regularly telling female
students that they were not as good as male students. She reported her concerns to the Chair of
the Music Department and the office she thought was supposed to deal with gender bias. She
obtained no response from either of them, but she believes that Professor Amano found out about
her complaints and took steps to retaliate.
Former Student 5 said that following her complaints to the department and the gender
bias office, she attempted to ask Professor Amano to schedule the “preview” of her end-of-
semester recital, which was required of all Program majors. Professor Amano, however, refused
to answer or return her phone calls, and when she tried to speak with him in his office, he refused
to talk with her. She prevailed on a male friend to ask Professor Amano to schedule her preview,
which he ultimately did in a written notice posted on a bulletin board.
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According to Former Student 5, when she appeared to perform her preview before three
faculty members, Professor Amano abruptly terminated her performance after ten minutes and
told her to leave. She waited in the hall outside the performance room for some feedback. After
some time, one of the faculty members came out of the performance room and told her that she
“wasn’t USU quality” and that she would have to wait until the end of the next semester to
schedule another recital. According to the student, no other reason was given for this decision.
Former Student 5 is certain that this humiliating experience was intended as retaliation for
having complained to University officials. She said that prior to the attempted preview she had
won many competitions and had been awarded the prize for the Program’s most outstanding
student when At any rate, she withdrew from the Piano Program on
the day of the attempted preview, just a few credits short of graduation. She did not return to the
University.
Scholarships
Former student 12, a female who graduated from the Piano Program in 2012, was the
recipient of yearly scholarships from the Piano Program. She told us that during her years at the
University she and other students frequently discussed the amounts and terms of their
scholarships, and from these discussions she reached two conclusions. First, she believes that
scholarship amounts awarded to males were generally higher than females. Second, she believes
that scholarships to females typically required the students to provide unpaid clerical work for
the Youth Conservatory program, whereas scholarships to males did not. She said that, instead,
males were hired as paid “office coordinators” for the Youth Conservatory program. We heard
similar complaints from other students.
Until August 2017, Professor Amano was the sole arbiter of student scholarships. He
reportedly decided which students would get scholarships, how much they would get, and
whether the scholarship should be reduced during the year on the basis of poor academic
performance or for some other reason. Several former students told us that they went through
the Piano Program under the constant threat that their scholarships would be reduced if Professor
Amano became displeased with them.
Following Professor Amano’s departure from campus in August 2017, Professor Hirst
and the other faculty members changed the manner in which scholarships were awarded. Rather
than leaving the decision to a single faculty member, they decided to award scholarships based
on (1) the average of scores submitted by all three of the current faculty for each student and (2)
the average dollar amount proposed by each faculty member for each student. The proposed
scholarships derived in this manner are then adjusted based on discussions with the Head of the
Music Department and taking into account the total amount of scholarship money available for
the Piano Program.
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We attempted to check the accuracy of the contention that scholarships were historically
awarded in a way that unfairly favored men. Unfortunately, the scholarship records made
available to us may be incomplete. Further, mere numbers do not disclose the reasons why
particular students received particular amounts. So we are unable to say definitively whether
women were treated unfairly. The following data points, however, may be relevant.
Professor Hirst told us Professor Amano based the amount of scholarships on the piano
performance skills of students, and he typically favored men in this regard. Following Professor
Amano’s departure for his sabbatical last year, the three remaining faculty members decided they
would “restore” scholarship reductions made by Professor Amano in the period before his
departure. Professor Hirst told us that all such reductions had been made in scholarships held by
women. He also told us that as of the fall of 2017, there were only three students whose
scholarships carried no work requirements, and all of them were males. According to Professor
Hirst, of the five scholarships awarded females, four carried work requirements.
The Piano Program’s scholarship records for years since 2009, although incomplete and
somewhat ambiguous, suggest that men in the Program received far more than women. In most
of those years, men received more than twice as much as women on a per capita basis. As a per
capita average from 2009 to 2017, female students received 41 cents for each scholarship dollar
paid to males.
Since August 2017, the administration and faculty of the Piano Program have taken
positive steps to address gender discrimination, and the many of the students have reacted
favorably. Professors Hirst, Olson and Ezola modified the manner in which student
performances are scored and scholarships are awarded. By many accounts, the faculty has been
more open to input from students. In February of this year, seven of the Program’s juniors and
seniors issued a “to whom it may concern” letter in which they recognized a positive change in
the operation of the Program. The students wrote that they had “witnessed and experienced the
toxic culture that others have alluded to.” They wrote, “It is unfortunate that many of these
issues were not addressed earlier.” But, they wrote, because of their own “discussions with the
administration, changes involving the music faculty occurred in the fall of 2017 that, we feel,
have eliminated the hostile environment.” Crediting the “transparent way the faculty and
administration [have] dealt with these issues,” the students wrote that they are “proud to be piano
majors at Utah State . . . . “
University Policy 305 declares that the University “is committed to providing an
environment free from harassment and other forms of discrimination based on . . . sex.” Policy
339.4 provides: “No member of the Utah State University community shall engage in sexual
harassment.” Policy 407.8.2 provides that “[n]o faculty member shall engage in sexual
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harassment,” and that sexual harassment “will not be tolerated by the faculty or administration.”
Policy 407.8.1 defines sexual harassment as “unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual
favors, or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature” when certain conditions are
present, including when submission to such conduct is a condition to a student’s academic
success, or interferes with a student’s academic success, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or
offensive learning environment. Policy 407.8.4 provides that “in some instances,” for sexual
harassment to be committed, “a pattern of prohibit[ed] conduct is required.” Policy 339.4.5
prohibits retaliation for complaints of sexual harassment.
Policy 407.9.2 prohibits consensual sexual relationships in the instructional context: “No
faculty member shall have an amorous relationship (consensual or otherwise) with a student who
is enrolled in a course being taught by the faculty member, whose work (including work as a
teaching assistant) is being supervised by the faculty member, or whose present or future
academic or professional success is controlled or influenced the faculty member.”
Below we have summarized and evaluated allegations of sexual harassment and sexual
assault against current and former faculty members. We have paid particular attention to the
impact of sexual harrassment on each student’s academic experience.
According to many reports, was, from the beginning of his career at the
University, part of Professor Amano’s “inner circle” of favored students,
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would have done no good and might have had adverse consequences. She believed that
Professor Amano or some other faculty member would have retaliated because was
the faculty favorite.
During the investigation of Former Student 8’s complaint, Professor Amano sent an
email, , to the Title IX Office in defense of Professor Amano
wrote, “I knew about this whole affair 8 years ago . . . .” The email stated that Professor Amano
also knew about the other undergraduates with whom was having sexual relations.
His solution in , which he believed to have been sufficient, was to transfer
sexual partners to other classes so they would not continue to be taught by
Professor Amano’s email criticized Former Student 8 for raising the issue in her
Title IX Complaint, and he questioned her motive in doing so. Because of concerns that
Professor Amano would retaliate against Former Student 8, the Title IX Office directed him to
have no contact with her during the investigation.
During our discussions with him, Professor Amano confirmed that he knew about
sexual relations with undergraduate students , but he did not think any harm
was done because by the time he found out about them, the affairs were over (according to
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One of the other undergraduates with whom was having sex was
Former Student 19. In the spring of that year, this student was taking from
through the University, and they began a sexual relationship that, according to this
student, lasted for a few months. Former Student 19 said that in the fall of that year, she told
that the relationship was over.
Former Student 19 was unwilling to be interviewed for the present investigation, but she
was willing to answer written questions we submitted to her, in detail. In her account of
meetings with the Title IX Office , the staff told her that her relationship with
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We were unable to locate Former Student 31, a third student with whom
reportedly had sex during this period.
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In our interview with him, categorically denied having had any sexual
relationship with Former Student 10.
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We heard from many of our interviewees that good piano programs, like the University’s
program, are inevitably difficult and stressful. Studying the piano at this level requires discipline
and extremely hard work. We also heard that the best programs and the best teachers are the
most demanding. It is no wonder that almost all of the current and former students with whom
we spoke experienced stress and anxiety during their training at the University.
We cannot ignore, however, the stories of many current and former students who claim
that they were frequently humiliated and psychologically abused by the Piano Program faculty.
Although we are certainly not experts in the field, we are unable to see how such treatment of
students could advance any legitimate pedagogical objectives. Many of the students to whom we
spoke believe they were abused because their professors were arrogant and callous. Although
Professor Amano was one of the faculty members accused of such behavior, he was not the only
one. Professor Hirst and a former professor who is now teaching elsewhere were also frequently
mentioned in these complaints. Professor Olson said that when he joined the Piano Program
faculty in 2010, he became concerned at the way in which Professor Amano treated his students.
According to Professor Olson, Professor Amano humiliated students without telling them how
they could improve. Professor Olson said he became a de facto “therapist” for such students.
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insubordination. Although Professor Amano told our interviewer that he did not become angry,
other students whom we interviewed corroborated Current Student 5’s version of the event. In
May 2017, Current Student 5 and other students lodged complaints in the Title IX Office based
on this and similar events. As of the time we interviewed these students in February and March,
however, none of them had received a response from the Title IX Office.
Another current student, Current Student 3, said that in a class held in 2016, Professor
Amano openly belittled a female faculty member who was temporarily filling in for Professor
Hirst. In the same class he criticized Current Student 3’s performance by saying, “Your brain
isn’t capable of processing anything.” Similarly, Current Student 6 told interviewers that
Professor Amano told students in one class that they knew nothing and did not deserve to be in
the Program.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Professor Amano – We conclude that for more than a decade Professor Amano created a
hostile academic environment for women and discriminated against female students on the basis
of gender. We conclude that he tolerated sexual harassment of students by faculty members
whom he was supposed to be supervising, without holding those faculty members accountable.
We recommend that, pursuant to Policy 407.4.1, the University President initiate a proceeding
for the dismissal of Professor Amano. If he is not dismissed, we recommend that he be
reassigned to duties in the Music Department that will minimize his contact with the Piano
Program’s students and faculty.
– For reasons that should be apparent in this report, the University should
not allow to rejoin the faculty or participate in any way in the Youth
Conservatory or the Piano Clinic.
Professor Hirst –
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enabled Professor Amano’s discriminatory acts, or else ignored them, without taking meaningful
steps to hold him accountable or correct the problems to which they led. Although we do not
recommend a specific sanction for Professor Hirst, we believe he should be removed as interim
coordinator of the Piano Program. The University should appoint a new coordinator to lead the
Program. The University should choose a coordinator who is committed to providing
opportunities for all of the Program’s students. He or she should be capable of restoring peace
and confidence among colleagues in the Piano Program and resolving the deep conflicts that now
undermine the Program’s mission.
Standards for faculty behavior toward students – We do not believe that the policies of
the University clearly prohibit psychologically abusive behavior by the faculty. Because faculty
relationships with students in the arts are in many ways different from other disciplines, we
recommend that the Caine College of the Arts take the lead in developing its own standards for
faculty behavior. The objectives would be: (a) to ensure that students are appropriately
challenged and held to rigorous academic, artistic, and performance standards, but without
humiliation or ridicule from faculty; and (b) to establish a clear procedure for the evaluation of
student complaints of serious mistreatment and for counseling of faculty who violate the
standards of behavior.
Plan to eliminate gender discrimination – The Caine College of the Arts should work
with the Piano Program faculty, the Office of General Counsel, and the Title IX Office to
formulate a plan to eliminate gender discrimination in the Piano Program. They should review
the student admissions process, the grading process, the process for scoring student
performances, the process for awarding scholarships, and the hiring process for faculty to
advance gender balance. The plan should build on steps already taken by the Piano Program
since August 2017 to increase transparency and fairness in judging student performances and in
awarding departmental scholarships.
Title IX Office – The Office of General Counsel should work with the Title IX Office
and the Provost to develop standards for more stringent review of student claims of gender
discrimination and sexual harassment by faculty. The standards should provide for more
aggressive investigation and prosecution of faculty accused of misconduct, regardless of the
tenured or non-tenured status of the faculty respondent. The standards should encourage the
Title IX staff to evaluate the general climate of a University unit in relation to discrimination.
The Office of General Counsel should direct the training of Title IX staff on the most sensitive
issues that frequently arise in sexual harassment investigations, including the complainant’s
consent or lack of consent. Where serious student complaints fall outside the scope of the Title
IX Office’s charter, the Title IX staff should have the authority and responsibility to follow up on
referrals to appropriate University officials to make sure that complaints are resolved.
4821-1428-8479