
Lang
1/24/26
Courses at the University of Iowa Center for Intellectual Freedom are launching later than expected this semester, with the center’s interim director canceling the first iteration of an American politics class.
That’s according to a report from Iowa Capital Dispatch.
While the original schedule for the Center for Intellectual Freedom at the UI had courses running the entire semester, the center’s interim director, Luciano de Castro, said in an interview the inability to hire faculty, figure out lecturer schedules and adequately advertise to students led him to cancel the section set to start in January and only offer courses starting in March.
Meanwhile, lawmakers who codified the center’s creation are pushing to make programming the center will offer a requirement for all students at the university. Certain courses offered by the center in the future could become required as part of general education courses as bills in the Iowa Senate and House of Representatives to change core curriculum move ahead. Legislation to require public university students take courses in American history and government has passed out of subcommittee in both chambers.
A link to the full Iowa Capital Dispatch report can be found here.


