Yeah... Read the negative reviews and tell me you don't see the correlation. Same shit has been going on for years.
What I see is that she seems to be following a particular format/curriculum over her tenure, and it rubs people the wrong way.
Every race/sexism thread I see on NeoGAF is often populated with a similar reaction from posters who look at the discussion as a personal attack, when it is nothing of the sort. I highly doubt the professor stood in front of the class, pointed specifically at the three students in question, and told them that they were the bad guy.
Racism is a topic worthy of discussion, but it has been no surprise that many of the people that want to shut that discussion down are people of privilege. A similar thing can be seen in economics discussions. Where often, the people with economic privilege, have a hard time empathizing or understanding those that do not.
For a not so volatile example of what I'm getting at, think of Gamer side, where you may see a thread with a particular topic like, "Should I buy a 3DS or a Vita?" You'll find many posts of "but why not both.gif.jpeg" etc, etc, from those that have the luxury (read: privilege), of being able to have both, and they honestly probably don't understand why the thread starter can't just run out and buy both platforms, thus alleviating his problem altogether. There could be many, many reasons why they can't get both, and when they explain that to the thread, there is understanding on both sides. But it's still an example (and a minor one, at that), of an instance of privilege. Ditto for the PC Master race. Not everyone can just rush out and build a gaming PC, so a gaming console, despite not being as powerful as a top end PC, may be a better choice for many gamers.
When racism, sexism, and poverty is concerned, however, there is a very distinct lack of understanding and empathy, and a huge push to just shut the conversation down, and for those affected to simply "get over it," and "stop talking about it, so it will go away." This leads to the affected people to get frustrated, and angry, because they feel marginalized and dismissed like a naughty child caught doing something inappropriate. And that sucks for them, and it sucks for everyone, because it doesn't lead to any real change of the issue/conflict.
Minorities don't bring up racism, and women don't bring up sexism, to make white males feel bad. We bring up those issues because they are happening, and they bother us, and we should work together to eliminate both.
Wait, "uppity" is racist too? And "dinks"? I mean, they're pejorative, but I've never seen any sort of racial connotation applied to them. I believe you, but that's three non-racist (from my experience) pejoratives in one day that are suddenly racist. Crazy.
Yeah, I know. It's crazy. "Uppity" has definitely been a known pejorative here in the states. I didn't know about "dink" until I was much, much older. If memory serves, "dink" is a derogatory terms used to describe a Vietnamese person. I think it was coined during the Vietnam War, but I could be mistaken, it could be much older.