Scott v. Milwaukee School of Engineering

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedApril 17, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00618
StatusUnknown

This text of Scott v. Milwaukee School of Engineering (Scott v. Milwaukee School of Engineering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Milwaukee School of Engineering, (E.D. Wis. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

SHERRY E. SCOTT,

Plaintiff, Case No. 23-cv-618-pp v.

MILWAUKEE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING,

Defendant.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DKT. NO. 20) AND DISMISSING CASE

On May 16, 2023, the plaintiff filed a complaint against her former employer, alleging that it discriminated against her based on her race, gender and color in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §2000e et seq. Dkt. No. 1. On June 28, 2024, the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on all claims. Dkt. No. 20. The motion has been fully briefed since August 2024. Dkt. Nos. 21, 30, 36. The court extends its regrets to the parties for the length of time it has taken to rule on the motion. This order grants the motion for summary judgment and dismisses the case. I. Factual and Procedural Background The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted: The defendant is a private, non-profit university in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Dkt. No. 32 at ¶1. It employs both full-time regular faculty and part- time adjunct faculty to teach courses. Id. at ¶¶3, 7. Full-time faculty receive multi-year appointments, while adjunct faculty receive one-year contracts that do not automatically renew. Id. at ¶¶5, 9. A. Adjunct Faculty Evaluation Methods

Adjunct faculty in the mathematics department do not undergo formal performance evaluations and primarily are evaluated based on student evaluations and “word of mouth communications from other faculty.” Id. at ¶12. The mathematics department chair, Dr. Matey Kaltchev, reviews student evaluations at the end of each quarter to assess faculty performance. Id. at ¶15. The defendant also provides faculty with a copy of their student evaluations each quarter. Id. at ¶16. Kaltchev says that he does not consider student comments claiming the faculty member does not have the required subject-

matter expertise and overlooks other irrelevant comments, such as that the faculty member is shy, loud, avoids eye contact, is boring or does not have command of the room. Id. at ¶¶17–18. The plaintiff disputes this, asserting that Kaltchev informed her only that he “evaluated the student evaluations for bias.” Id. The defendant asserts that its faculty senate has reviewed the questions in the student evaluation survey and “vetted” them for gender bias and “other biases.” Id. at ¶14. The plaintiff disputes this, arguing that the defendant has

produced no evidence of the alleged review by the faculty senate other than a statement in an affidavit by the defendant’s executive vice president of academics, that she never was informed that the senate had reviewed and vetted the evaluation survey for bias and that a former member of the faculty senate does not recall such a review taking place prior to his departure in late November 2019. Id. The plaintiff also argues that the defendant never raised this assertion prior to the current motion. Id.

B. The Plaintiff’s Employment and Initial Concerns About Student Evaluations

In 2015, the plaintiff began working for the defendant as an adjunct professor in the mathematics department. Id. at ¶22. Kaltchev made the initial decision to hire the plaintiff and the subsequent decisions to offer her a new contract each year through the 2019-20 academic year. Id. at ¶¶21, 23. None of the plaintiff’s contracts had renewal provisions, and each provided that her assigned classes might vary from quarter to quarter, that there was a possibility of having no workload and that there was a possibility that the workload could change within a quarter. Id. at ¶¶25–26. Kaltchev was the primary evaluator of the plaintiff’s performance. Id. at ¶28. In his deposition, Kaltchev testified that he “noticed a pattern of negative student comments” about the plaintiff’s “organization” during her employment. Id. at ¶29. The plaintiff disputes this; she asserts that “word of mouth communications” constitute inadmissible hearsay and that the identities of the students who allegedly made the comments are unknown. Id. The parties agree that Kaltchev met with the plaintiff in Spring 2019 to discuss her performance. Id. at ¶¶30–31. But although Kaltchev recalls discussing the students’ responses (including the comments about organization) and what could be done, the plaintiff contends that she and Kaltchev “could not figure out where these comments were coming from.” Id. at ¶31. The defendant says that before Spring 2019, Kaltchev didn’t do anything about the plaintiff’s performance because the defendant usually gives new faculty “a few years” to adapt, and because Kaltchev was busy with his own teaching load; the plaintiff says that

even in Spring 2019, Kaltchev did not “address concerns” about her performance. Id. at ¶32. On May 14, 2019 (after the meeting), the plaintiff emailed Kaltchev stating that “preconceived notions that the students have and can[]not reconcile is a factor in cases such as mine—an African American woman math professor in predominantly white male classes.” Id. at ¶33. The plaintiff also suggested that Kaltchev or other senior faculty could visit her class and express support for her to try to “level the playing field.” Id. at ¶34. This was

the first time the plaintiff raised concerns to Kaltchev about her student evaluations, though the plaintiff contends that faculty “regularly discussed bias” in student evaluations. Id. at ¶¶35, 40. Kaltchev reviewed the plaintiff’s evaluations from the current and prior academic year for evidence of bias, stereotyping or other comments that could have been related to her race or sex. Id. at ¶38. Kaltchev says that he found no evidence of bias. Id. at ¶39. The plaintiff disputes this, arguing that Kaltchev did not review the evaluations

closely enough for “subtler” signs of bias than, for example, racial slurs. Id. The plaintiff asserts that in a faculty meeting that took place during the 2018-19 academic year, Kaltchev “raised the general issue of bias in student evaluations;” the defendant says that this assertion contradicts her deposition testimony, in which she testified only that the conversations were about bias in general, not specifically about bias in student evaluations. Dkt. No. 37 at ¶23. The plaintiff says that she recalls, not only that the faculty discussed the issue of bias in student evaluations, but the faculty forming a committee to

investigate other ways to measure faculty performance. Id. at ¶26. The plaintiff also states that there was at least one follow-up meeting within one or two months after the faculty committee was formed; though she recalls the committee coming up with some proposals for other ways to evaluate faculty performance, there was no follow-up after that. Id. at ¶28. C. The October 2019 Assistant Professor Position In October 2019, the plaintiff applied for a regular assistant professor position with the defendant. Dkt. No. 32 at ¶¶41–42. In support of her

application, the plaintiff submitted three letters of recommendation which she argues “laud[ed]” her teaching skills; the defendant contends that the letters mentioned the plaintiff’s “teaching ability as a teaching assistant about 20 years prior to her October 2019 application,” but that the letters focused more on her research. Id. at ¶43-44. The parties agree that “[a] critical aspect of each candidate’s application the search committee placed emphasis on were letters of recommendation that addressed each candidate’s teaching abilities.” Id. at ¶45.

The search committee for the position for which the plaintiff applied consisted of ten of the defendant’s faculty members; Kaltchev was the chair. Id. at ¶¶46–47.

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Scott v. Milwaukee School of Engineering, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-milwaukee-school-of-engineering-wied-2025.