• Columbia whistleblower on exposing college rankings: ‘They are worthless’

    US News relegated Columbia to 18th from second place after it was revealed the college had misrepresented key statistics.
    The Columbia University academic whose exposure of false data caused the prestigious institution to plunge in US college rankings has accused its administration of deception and a whitewash over the affair.

    Michael Thaddeus, a mathematics professor, said that by submitting rigged numbers to drive the university up the influential US News & World Report rankings, Columbia put its financial priorities ahead of students education in order to fund a ballooning and secretive bureaucracy.

    On Monday, US News relegated Columbia from second to 18th in the latest rankings after the college admitted to “outdated and/or incorrect methodologies” in some of its previous claims about the quality of the education the university provides.

    “I find it very difficult to believe the errors were honest and inadvertent at this point,” Thaddeus told the Guardian.

    He added: “The response that the university made was not the forthright, direct, complete response of a university that really wanted to clear the air and really wanted to inform the public. They address certain issues but then they completely ignored or whitewashed other ones.”

    Thaddeus embarrassed Columbia and shocked the academic world in February when he published a lengthy analysis accusing the university of submitting “inaccurate, dubious or highly misleading” statistics for the US News rankings. Among other things, he took issue with claims about class sizes, which the mathematics professor said he knew from experience were not accurate, and the assertion that all of the university’s faculty held the highest degrees in their fields.

    Thaddeus also said the university hugely overstated spending on instruction, claiming it far exceeded other Ivy League universities, by adding in the cost of patient care in the medical school.

    Columbia initially defended its numbers before admitting on Friday that Thaddeus was right about class sizes and the qualifications of its teaching staff. “We deeply regret the deficiencies in our prior reporting and are committed to doing better,” Columbia’s provost, Mary Boyce, said in the statement.

    In July, the university said it was pulling out of this year’s rankings. US News made its own calculations, based in part on federal data, and this week moved the university down a humiliating 16 places.

    Thaddeus began digging into the numbers as Columbia celebrated its stunning rise in the rankings from 18th in 1988. It broke into the top five in 2011 and eventually made second place last year.

    “A few other top-tier universities have also improved their standings, but none has matched Columbia’s extraordinary rise. It is natural to wonder what the reason might be,” he wrote in his analysis.

    When Thaddeus began to suspect that Columbia’s numbers didn’t add up, he saw the opportunity to discredit a system he regards as a con perpetrated on prospective students desperate to ensure that the tens of thousands of dollars a year many will spend on gigantic tuition fees are worth it.

    The US News rankings, alongside less influential ones by the Wall Street Journal, Forbes and other publications, have a significant impact on which universities prospective students favor. Thaddeus said Columbia’s fall exposes the shoddiness of a system that relies on an institution’s own numbers without checking.

    “I’ve long believed that all university rankings are essentially worthless. They’re based on data that have very little to do with the academic merit of an institution and that the data might not be accurate in the first place,” he said.

    “It was never my objective to knock Columbia down the rankings. A better outcome would be if the rankings themselves are knocked down and people just stop reading them, stop taking them as seriously as they have.”

    It’s not the first scandal involving the US News rankings. Last year, a former dean of Temple University’s business school in Philadelphia was sent to prison for fraud after rigging data to move the college’s MBA sharply up the rankings.

    But Thaddeus, who has taught at Columbia for 24 years, also had another target in his sights – his own university’s administration.

    The former head of Columbia’s mathematics department described an expanding and self-replicating bureaucracy that is growing ever more expensive to maintain. He said that Columbia’s endowment is not large enough to cover the cost of the growing administration and so it is paid for by increasing tuition costs.

    “It means that our educational programmes have to be run to some degree as money-making ventures. That is the secret that can’t be openly acknowledged,” he said.
    Thaddeus suspects administrators rigged the data to move the university up the rankings in order to justify rising tuition fees which, at about $65,000 a year, are more than five times the amount paid by the parents of today’s students in the 1980s.

    “It’s clear that the growth of university bureaucracies and administration has been a major driver of the cost of higher education growing much, much faster than inflation. We now have about 4,500 administrators on the main campus, about three times the number of faculty, and that’s a new development over the past 20 years,” he said.

    “What is less clear is what all these administrators are actually doing. They say that more administrators are needed to comply with government regulations. There may be a little truth to that, but not much, because these regulations in question were enacted decades ago. There hasn’t been a lot of new university regulation that I know of.”

    Thaddeus acknowledged that there was a need for more staff to provide services that were not previously available such as much more extensive career placement, counseling and psychiatric care. But he does not believe that accounts for the growth of a bureaucracy he describes as self-serving and unaccountable.

    “I was kind of radicalised by the experience of being department chair in mathematics from 2017 to 2020. That’s when I saw how secretive, how autocratic, Columbia’s administration is. How they never share relevant information with faculty or students or the public. This episode has just seriously damaged the credibility of the administration. That saddens me, but it’s also important that these issues get out in the open,” he said.

    Thaddeus said that initially he was not willing to accuse the university of deliberately manipulating the rankings system.

    “When I first wrote my article, I expressed greater agnosticism on this point,” he said.
    But he said the university’s response, including its failure to be transparent about how the false data came to be reported, caused him to believe Columbia deliberately gamed the system.

    “Also, there’s been no move by the university to commission an external investigation, an investigation at arm’s length by a third party such as a law firm, which is standard practice when ranking scandals erupt. If I had seen some move like that by the university, I would be more inclined to think that the errors were honest and inadvertent,” he said.

    Approached for comment, Columbia said it had nothing to add to the statements it has already made.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/16/columbia-whistleblower-us-news-rankings-michael-thaddeus

    #ranking #bullshit #ESR #université #facs #ESR #classement #statistiques #classement #Columbia_University #USA #Etats-Unis

  • #Columbia_University cancels panel on Turkey due to pressure from Turkish government”

    Colombia University effectively canceled a panel discussion on Turkey two days before the event, citing “academic standards.”

    Steven A. Cook, one of the panelists and a senior fellow for Middle East & Africa studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, has tweeted that the decision was made after “the university came under pressure form Turkish government.

    “Disappointed to learn that @Columbia ‘s Provost effectively canceled this panel two days before the event, citing “academic standards.” One can only assume that the university came under pressure form the govt of #Turkey and its supporters. Terrible precedent,” Cook tweeted.

    The panel discussion was about the Turkish governments increasing authoritarian tendencies and human rights violations in the country since a coup attmept on July 15, 2016.

    Daniel Balson invited the university administratrion to explain “what (specifically) about this panel does not meet its “academic standards.”

    “This is stunning – @Columbia should be pressed to explain what (specifically) about this panel does not meet its “academic standards”. If they think the facts are wrong they should publicly correct. Too serious a precedent to ignore. @KachaniS, @ColumbiaVPTL @ColumbiaSpec,” Balson tweeted.

    https://turkeypurge.com/columbia-university-cancels-panel-on-turkey-due-to-pressure-from-turkis
    #université #Turquie #censure #liberté_académique #liberté_d'expression #USA #Etats-Unis #standards_académiques

  • Columbia University Professors Sign Petition in Support of BDS - Jewish World News - Haaretz - Israeli News Source Haaretz.com
    http://www.haaretz.com/jewish/news/1.706529

    Forty Columbia University faculty members have signed a petition urging the New York school to divest from companies that “supply, perpetuate, and profit from a system that has subjugated the Palestinian people.”
    The petition was released Monday morning to mark the first day of Israel Apartheid Week, the Columbia Spectator reported.
    According to the petition, the signatories “stand with Columbia University Apartheid Divest, Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine as well as with Jewish Voice for Peace in calling upon the University to take a moral stance against Israel’s violence in all its forms.”
    They include Rashid Khalidi, a history and Middle Eastern studies professor who is a longtime critic of Israel and supporter of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement; Joseph Massad, a professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history who sees Zionism as a racist and colonialist movement, and Nadia Abu El-Haj, an anthropology professor who received tenure in 2007 following a heated battle over the merits of her work, particularly a book that accuses Israel of manipulating archaeological findings to legitimize its existence.
    The most heavily represented departments among the signers are Middle Eastern South Asian and Africa studies, or MESAAS, English and comparative literature, and anthropology.
    Partha Chatterjee, an anthropology and MESAAS professor at the Ivy League school who signed, told the Spectator in an email that he wanted to protest Israel’s security regime, which “virtually amounts to apartheid.”
    “I fully support every effort to put pressure on the Israeli government to end its illegal occupation of Palestinian lands,” he said.
    Dirk Salomons, a signatory who is a senior lecturer at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs, told the Spectator, “I’ve always had a feeling as a Jew that a Jewish state should rise slightly above the lack of morality of its neighbors. It pains me to see how a country which I love and which I have visited many times can be so blind to the needs of its neighbors.”

  • Pétition des professeurs de l’université de Columbia à New York
    Des enseignants, chercheurs et membres de la communauté de l’Université de Columbia, le 5 mars 2016
    http://www.aurdip.fr/petition-des-professeurs-de-l.html

    En tant qu’universitaires et membres de la communauté, nous sommes, professionnellement, intellectuellement, et moralement, investis dans notre université. Nous estimons de notre devoir de tenir l’institution responsable des implications éthiques de ses propres actions, notamment de ses investissements financiers et de leurs implications dans le monde. En particulier, nous entrons en désaccord avec nos participations financières dans des institutions associées à l’occupation militaire par Israël des terres palestiniennes, à ses violations continuelles des droits de l’homme palestiniens, à sa destruction systématique de la vie et des biens, à sa ségrégation inhumaine et à ses formes systémiques de discrimination.

    En 2002, les membres du corps enseignant de différents départements ont demandé à ce qu’il soit mis fin à notre investissement dans toutes les entreprises qui avaient approvisionné l’armée d’Israël en armes et en équipement militaire. Étudiants, anciens élèves, professeurs, et membres du personnel, ont convenu de joindre leur nom à un appel demandant de retirer l’autorisation sociale à l’État d’Israël dans son utilisation d’une violence asymétrique et excessive contre les civils palestiniens.

    Nous sommes aujourd’hui aux côtés d’Apartheid Divest de l’université de Columbia, des Étudiants de Columbia pour la Justice en Palestine aussi bien que d’une Voix juive pour la paix, en faisant appel à l’université pour qu’elle adopte une position morale contre la violence d’Israël sous toutes ses formes. Nous exigeons que l’université se désinvestisse des sociétés qui fournissent, perpétuent, et profitent d’un système qui subjugue le peuple palestinien depuis plus de 68 ans. Nous prenons bonne note que notre position se tient explicitement en soutien à un mouvement non violent privilégiant les droits de l’homme comme le seul moyen d’aller à une résolution politique.

    Nous demandons à notre université de reconnaître son rôle indéniable, et son influence, dans et sur les systèmes mondiaux, un rôle éminent qui s’accompagne d’une dose de la même importance de responsabilité morale.

    Signataires :
    Nadia Abu El-Haj | Anthropology, Barnard
    Lila Abu Lughod | Anthropology, Columbia
    Gil Anidjar | Religion & MESAAS, Columbia
    Zainab Bahrani | Art History & Archaeology, Columbia
    Brian Boyd | Anthropology, Columbia
    Allison Busch | MESAAS, Columbia
    Partha Chatterjee | Anthropology & MESAAS, Columbia
    Hamid Dabashi | MESAAS, Columbia
    E. Valentine Daniel | Anthropology, Columbia
    Katherine Franke | Law, Columbia
    Victoria de Grazia | History, Columbia
    Robert Gooding-Williams | Philosophy & IRAAS, Columbia
    Stathis Gourgouris | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Farah Griffin | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Wael Hallaq | MESAAS, Columbia
    Marianne Hirsch | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Jean Howard | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Rashid Khalidi | History & MESAAS, Columbia
    Mahmood Mamdani | Anthropology & MESAAS, Columbia
    Joseph Massad | MESAAS, Columbia
    Brinkley Messick | Anthropology & MESAAS, Columbia
    Timothy Mitchell | MESAAS, Columbia
    Rosalind Morris | Anthropology, Columbia
    Frederick Neuhouser | Philosophy, Barnard
    Mae Ngai | History, Columbia
    Gregory Pflugfelder | History & EALAC, Columbia
    Sheldon Pollock | MESAAS, Columbia
    Elizabeth Povinelli | Anthropology, Columbia
    Wayne L. Proudfoot | Philosophy, Columbia
    Anupama Rao | History & Human Rights, Barnard
    Bruce Robbins | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    George Saliba | MESAAS, Columbia
    Dirk Salomons | SIPA, Columbia
    David Scott | Anthropology, Columbia
    Avinoam Shalem | Art History & Archaeology, Columbia
    Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Neferti Tadiar | Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Barnard
    Michael Taussig | Anthropology, Columbia
    Marc Van De Mieroop | History, Columbia
    Gauri Viswanathan | English & Comparative Literature, Columbia
    Paige West | Anthropology, Barnard
    Michael Harris | Mathematics, Columbia
    Jonathan Crary | Art History & Archaeology, Columbia
    Shamus Khan | Sociology, Columbia
    Zoe Crossland | Anthropology, Columbia
    Steven Gregory | Anthropology, Columbia
    James Schamus | Film, Columbia
    Abeer Shaheen | MESAAS, Columbia
    Elizabeth Bernstein | Sociology, Barnard
    J. Blake Turner | Psychiatry, Columbia
    Lydia Goehr | Philosophy, Columbia
    Danielle Haase-Dubosc | French & Romance Philology, Columbia
    Peter Marcuse | GSAPP, Columbia
    Gray Tuttle | EALAC, Columbia
    Rebecca Jordan-Young | Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies, Barnard
    Josh Whitford | Sociology, Columbia
    Ross Hamilton | English, Barnard
    Nora Akawi | GSAPP, Columbia
    Taylor Carman | Philosophy, Barnard
    Reinhold Martin | GSAPP, Columbia
    Branden W. Joseph | Art History, Columbia
    Felicity Scott | GSAPP, Columbia
    Audra Simpson | Anthropology, Columbia
    Carol Benson | International & Comparative Education, Columbia
    Michael Thaddeus | Mathematics, Columbia
    Karen Froud | Neuroscience & Education, Columbia
    John Collins | Philosophy, Columbia

    #Palestine #USA #Columbia_University #BDS #Boycott_universitaire

  • Redefining Diaspora in #Harlem
    http://africasacountry.com/redefining-diaspora-in-harlem

    In “Our Kind of People” (image above) the Harlem-based artist #Bayeté_Ross_Smith examines how clothing, ethnicity and gender affect our ideas about identity, personality and character. Devoid of any context for assessing the personality of the individual in the photograph, each photograph forces the viewer to face his or her own cultural biases. Ross Smith was one of ten Harlem-based artists and ten #Columbia_University students working together across diverse mediums, interests and cultural backgrounds for the month-long exhibition, “Bridging Boundaries: Redefining Diaspora” through much of February and early (...)

    #ART #Art_in_FLUX #Bridging_Boundaries:_Redefining_Diaspora #Emma_Sulkowicz #Ibou_Ndoye #Marcus_Hunter #Postcrypt_Art_Gallery