Skip to content
ADVERTISEMENT
Sign In
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Events
    • Virtual Events
    • Chronicle On-The-Road
    • Professional Development
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
  • More
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Events
    • Virtual Events
    • Chronicle On-The-Road
    • Professional Development
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
  • Events and Insights:
  • Leading in the AI Era
  • Chronicle Festival On Demand
  • Strategic-Leadership Program
Sign In
News

‘Ousted’ From Academe, Steven Salaita Says He’s Driving a School Bus to Make Ends Meet

Emma-Pettit.png
By Emma Pettit
February 19, 2019
Steven Salaita, a former professor whose revoked job offer in 2014 stirred national controversy, says he now drives a school bus.
Steven Salaita, a former professor whose revoked job offer in 2014 stirred national controversy, says he now drives a school bus.Armando L. Sanchez, Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty Images

Steven G. Salaita, whose tenured-faculty appointment at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was withdrawn nearly five years ago over his harsh criticisms of Israel, has found a new job outside the ivory tower. He’s a school-bus driver.

To continue reading for FREE, please sign in.

Sign In

Or subscribe now to read with unlimited access for as low as $10/month.

Don’t have an account? Sign up now.

A free account provides you access to a limited number of free articles each month, plus newsletters, job postings, salary data, and exclusive store discounts.

Sign Up

Steven Salaita, a former professor whose revoked job offer in 2014 stirred national controversy, says he now drives a school bus.
Steven Salaita, a former professor whose revoked job offer in 2014 stirred national controversy, says he now drives a school bus.Armando L. Sanchez, Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty Images

Steven G. Salaita, whose tenured-faculty appointment at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was withdrawn nearly five years ago over his harsh criticisms of Israel, has found a new job outside the ivory tower. He’s a school-bus driver.

Salaita, formerly a professor of English at Virginia Tech, was going to assume a new post at Illinois in the fall of 2014. But a string of tweets that he posted about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict drew considerable outrage. Illinois trustees denied him the offer. And news of Salaita’s dismissal, and the extensive litigation that followed, made him a polarizing crusader for academic freedom.

Let’s cut to the chase:

If you’re defending #Israel right now you’re an awful human being.

— Steven Salaita (@stevesalaita) July 9, 2014

I repeat: if you’re defending #Israel right now, then “hopelessly brainwashed” is your best prognosis.#Gaza #FreePalestine

— Steven Salaita (@stevesalaita) July 20, 2014

This is not a conflict between #Israel and “Hamas.”

It’s a struggle by an Indigenous people against a colonial power.#Gaza #FreePalestine

— Steven Salaita (@stevesalaita) July 17, 2014

Salaita then took a position at the American University of Beirut, from which he was “ousted,” he says, due to pressure from U.S. senators and university donors alike. (Neither Salaita nor the university immediately responded to requests for comment, but in 2016 the university denied accusations that Salaita had been purposefully kept from being appointed to a new post as director of its Center for American Studies and Research. Eventually the University of Illinois agreed to pay Salaita a $600,000 settlement and cover his legal fees.)

A door had slammed shut on academe, a career that had once “felt manifest,” Salaita wrote in a recent essay, “An Honest Living,” posted on his personal website. “I went to college at 17 knowing I would never leave.” Twenty-one years later, he was blocked from the Illinois position.

Salaita now spends his workday transporting children to and from school in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. He performs safety checks, dozes in the driver’s seat during breaks, and deposits “mini-hordes of cantankerous pupils into bustling subdivisions,” he wrote.

The life of a school-bus driver is “surprisingly complex,” Salaita wrote. “We’re supposed to facilitate access to education without considering its function in the systems that inform our wages.”

Salaita doesn’t see himself as an academic anymore. “I no longer profess and therefore no longer assume the burden of professorial expectations,” he wrote. “No more civility or nuance or dispassion or objectivity or whatever term they’re using these days to impel obedience.”

The exodus from a tenured professorship to an hourly wage has been mired in hardships, as well as some new freedoms.

ADVERTISEMENT

“There’s something profoundly liberating about leaving academe,” he wrote. You no longer have to care “about fashionable thinkers, network at the planet’s most boring parties, or quantify self-worth for scurrilous committees.” The industry’s culture of “social control” is “insidious and pervasive,” he wrote.

Still, after months without work, Salaita said his family had suffered financially. And he didn’t put himself through so much schooling to land a job that requires no college, he wrote.

“Then again,” he said, “neither did I attend so many years of college in order to be disabused of the notion that education is noble.”

Clarification (2/20/2016, 9:38 a.m.): A previous version of this article stated that “the university” had eventually paid Salaita a $600,000 settlement. The University of Illinois, not the American University of Beirut, paid the settlement. The article has been corrected.

Emma Pettit is a staff reporter at The Chronicle. Follow her on Twitter @EmmaJanePettit, or email her at emma.pettit@chronicle.com.

A version of this article appeared in the March 1, 2019, issue.
We’d like to hear from you — tell us how The Chronicle has made a difference in your work or helped you stay informed. You can also send feedback about this article or submit a letter to the editor.
Share
  • X (formerly Twitter)
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Email
Emma-Pettit.png
About the Author
Emma Pettit
Emma Pettit is a senior reporter at The Chronicle who covers the ways people within higher ed work and live — whether strange, funny, harmful, or hopeful. She’s also interested in political interference on campus, as well as overlooked crevices of academe, such as a scrappy puppetry program at an R1 university and a charmed football team at a Kansas community college. Follow her on Twitter at @EmmaJanePettit, or email her at emma.pettit@chronicle.com.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Content

Why I Was Fired
Denial of Job to Harsh Critic of Israel Divides Advocates of Academic Freedom

More News

Former Auburn Tigers quarterback Cam Newton looks on from the stands in the first quarter between the Auburn Tigers and the Georgia Bulldogs at Jordan-Hare Stadium on October 11, 2025 in Auburn, Alabama.
'Bright and Shiny Things'
How SEC Universities Won the Enrollment Wars
Illustration of a Gold Seal sticker embossed with President Trump's face
Regulatory Clash
Trump’s Higher-Ed Policy Fight
A bouquet of flowers rests on snow, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, on the campus of Brown University not far from where a shooting took place, in Providence, R.I. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Campus Safety
No Suspects Named in Brown U. Shooting That Killed 2, Wounded 9
Several hundred protesters marched outside 66 West 12th Street in New York City at a rally against cuts at the New School on December 10, 2025.
Finance & Operations
‘We’re Being DOGE-ed’: Sweeping Buyout Plan Rattles the New School’s Faculty

From The Review

Students protest against the war in Gaza on the anniversary of the Hamas attack on Israel at Columbia University in New York, New York, on Monday, October 7, 2024. One year ago today Hamas breached the wall containing Gaza and attacked Israeli towns and military installations, killing around 1200 Israelis and taking 250 hostages, and sparking a war that has over the last year killed over 40,000 Palestinians and now spilled over into Lebanon. Photographer: Victor J. Blue for The Washington Post via Getty Images
The Review | Opinion
The Fraught Task of Hiring Pro-Zionist Professors
By Jacques Berlinerblau
Photo-based illustration of a Greek bust of a young lady from the House of Dionysos with her face partly covered by a laptop computer and that portion of her face rendered in binary code.
The Review | Essay
A Coup at Carnegie Mellon?
By Sheila Liming, Catherine A. Evans
Vector illustration of a suited man fixing the R, which has fallen, in an archway sign that says "UNIVERSITY."
The Review | Essay
Why Flagships Are Winning
By Ian F. McNeely

Upcoming Events

010825_Cybersmart_Microsoft_Plain-1300x730.png
The Cyber-Smart Campus: Defending Data in the AI Era
Jenzabar_TechInvest_Plain-1300x730.png
Making Wise Tech Investments
Lead With Insight
  • Explore Content
    • Latest News
    • Newsletters
    • Letters
    • Free Reports and Guides
    • Professional Development
    • Events
    • Chronicle Store
    • Chronicle Intelligence
    • Jobs in Higher Education
    • Post a Job
  • Know The Chronicle
    • About Us
    • Vision, Mission, Values
    • DEI at The Chronicle
    • Write for Us
    • Work at The Chronicle
    • Our Reporting Process
    • Advertise With Us
    • Brand Studio
    • Accessibility Statement
  • Account and Access
    • Manage Your Account
    • Manage Newsletters
    • Individual Subscriptions
    • Group Subscriptions and Enterprise Access
    • Subscription & Account FAQ
  • Get Support
    • Contact Us
    • Reprints & Permissions
    • User Agreement
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • California Privacy Policy
    • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
900 19th Street, N.W., 6th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20006
© 2026 The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Chronicle of Higher Education is academe’s most trusted resource for independent journalism, career development, and forward-looking intelligence. Our readers lead, teach, learn, and innovate with insights from The Chronicle.
Follow Us
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube
  • facebook
  • linkedin