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Columbia Professor in Noose Case Is Fired on Plagiarism Charges
NYT ^ | 6/24/08 | Marc Santora

Posted on 06/24/2008 11:53:59 AM PDT by xtinct

The Columbia University professor who gained widespread attention last fall after a noose was found hanging on her office door was fired on Monday after months of wrangling over charges that she plagiarized the work of two former students and a former colleague.

Madonna G. Constantine, a professor of psychology and education with a focus on racial issues at Columbia’s Teachers College, was sanctioned in February, after an 18-month investigation into the plagiarism charge, but allowed to stay in her job and to appeal the ruling that she had violated the university’s academic standards. But over the last five months, tensions between Dr. Constantine and the administration grew more strained as she vigorously defended herself, filing not just the appeal but also a grievance against Susan Fuhrman, the college president.

Paul Giacomo, Dr. Constantine’s lawyer, said that the college’s move to dismiss his client was “purely retaliatory.”

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Education; Local News
KEYWORDS: academia; columbiau; constantine; fired; hatecrimehoax; highereducation; noose; plagiarism
Liberal academia is full of cheats. Professors frequently steal whole books from graduate and Ph.D. candidates, slap their names on the work... voila... an author off someone else's back. All books by professors (kawf) should be considered suspect.

Big question: What came first? plagiarism or noose claim to draw attention away from plagiarism charge?

Also, my experience, that plagiarism is seldom caught or acknowledged.

Madonna G. Constantine must have ticked someone off.

Bah by ...

Probably didn't vote for Hildabeast...thus outed !!!

1 posted on 06/24/2008 11:54:00 AM PDT by xtinct
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To: xtinct

“..a professor of psychology and education with a focus on racial issues..”

Ooh, what an exiting and indispensible occupation. I am sure she is way overpaid for services rendered.


2 posted on 06/24/2008 12:00:59 PM PDT by 353FMG (What marxism and fascism could not destroy, liberalism did.)
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To: xtinct
My guess would be:

Charged with plagiarism
Convicted of plagiarism
Fake noose during appeal
Bounced out the door

It also could have been the fact that the administration had reasonable suspicion that the noose incident was staged (as are so many of these events) to detract attention from the perp.

3 posted on 06/24/2008 12:03:13 PM PDT by 11Bush
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To: xtinct

Publish or Perish.


4 posted on 06/24/2008 12:06:03 PM PDT by massgopguy (I owe everything to George Bailey)
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To: massgopguy

Well, she’s got to go apply for a job somewhere. What is she qualified for?


5 posted on 06/24/2008 12:09:46 PM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: xtinct

methinks the noose is a ruse...hoping that the taint of racism would make the charges against her go away..... guess she played the wrong hand with the race card


6 posted on 06/24/2008 12:11:05 PM PDT by Americanwolf (no matter which way you cut it...barrack obama and hitlery are socialists)
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To: xtinct

whatever happened to the security camera footage that was turned over to the NYPD showing who hung the noose?


7 posted on 06/24/2008 12:17:10 PM PDT by Phantom Lord (Fall on to your knees for the Phantom Lord)
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To: Americanwolf
There is a continuing criminal investigation into who placed the noose on the door

And yet after all this time, we still haven't heard a peep about what the security camera video recordings revealed. You remember, the recordings that the University was refusing to turn over to authorities for several days, until they heard the authorities were on their way over with a subpoena.

8 posted on 06/24/2008 12:21:21 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Phantom Lord

it probably disapeared into the circular file as soon as the Nypd saw it was the Good Dr. herself hanging it on the door


9 posted on 06/24/2008 12:21:55 PM PDT by Americanwolf (no matter which way you cut it...barrack obama and hitlery are socialists)
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To: Phantom Lord

Fell into a black hole, apparently. I’ve never been able to find a single word about it.


10 posted on 06/24/2008 12:22:09 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Dilbert San Diego
Well she couldn't publish. And affirmative action babe. So when they are hot on her trail for stealing someone else's work she hangs a noose for sympathy and pl ayes the race card.Looks like she played the Joker instead
11 posted on 06/24/2008 12:28:54 PM PDT by 70th Division (If we lose the Republic we have lost it all.)
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To: Americanwolf

I wonder what Don Imus would say?


12 posted on 06/24/2008 12:30:14 PM PDT by Parmy
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To: xtinct

Technically speaking, she hung herself and left the noose on the door to dry.........


13 posted on 06/24/2008 12:33:47 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco
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To: Dilbert San Diego
What is she qualified for?

University of Chicago Hospitals Vice President for Community and External Affairs?

14 posted on 06/24/2008 12:44:21 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Given such dismal choices, I guess I'll vote for the old guy.)
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To: xtinct
Columbia University Teacher's College -- "A Racist Incident Rocks Teachers College"

Published: 10/11/2007

A noose on a black professor's door precipitates demonstrations, town hall meetings, anger and sadness

A day after a noose was found hanging on the doorknob of Professor Madonna Constantine's office, the Teachers College community rallied to her support in decrying the incident as intolerable. A message sent to the Teachers College Community from President Susan Fuhrman, explaining why police were on campus, denounced the incident as a "hateful act, which violates every Teachers College and societal norm." Columbia University President Lee Bollinger also issued a statement saying that "This is an assault on African Americans and therefore it is an assault on every one of us."

Teachers College administration quickly organized a town hall meeting to allow members of the community to raise issues of concern and air grievances to a panel that included President Susan Fuhrman; Provost Tom James, Janice Robinson, the General Counsel and Executive Director of the President's Office for Diversity and Community; and Student Senate representative Michelle Cammarata.

An hour and a half before that meeting convened to a packed house in the Cowin Center, students assembled on the front steps of the College, chanting "No more nooses," and bearing signs declaring "Intolerance is Intolerable," "Say No to Racism Every Day" and "We All Live in Jena," referring to an incident in Jena, Louisiana, where white high school students hung nooses in trees and were not prosecuted. As the impromptu program began, a number of TC and community representatives stepped forward to address the crowd. Among them was Constantine herself, who, speaking publicly for the first time and flanked by her attorneys, delivered a prepared statement.

Expressing her distress that the Teachers College community had been exposed to this incident, Constantine encouraged the crowd to stay strong in the face of such a blatant act of racism. "Hanging the noose on my office door reeks of cowardice and fear on many levels," she said. "I want the perpetrator to know that I will not be silenced."

As she spoke, others in the crowd shouted their support - "We've got your back!"

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer told the crowd that bigotry of any group is "something we will not tolerate."

Senator Bill Perkins called the incident a wake-up call that "even in the Ivy League Towers in Columbia University in 2007, we might as well be in Columbia, South Carolina, in 1809."

TC's President Fuhrman began by telling the crowd simply, "I'm protesting with you - I share your shock and outrage."

Fuhrman said that "this horrid act has no place in this institution, so I stand here with you."

As the crowd began took up a cry of "Not here, not anywhere!", with some pumping their fists in the air, Calvin Hunt, a representative from the People's Community of Harlem shouted out to the group, "No justice!" to the response, "No peace!" and attacked the comments by Borough President Stringer, who recently endorsed the right of eminent domain for Columbia University in its Manhattanville project. "If you are for Black people, be for them all the time. You are for Columbia's expansion and then come here and talk about a noose. You already put a noose around our neck."

In the Town Hall meeting a short time later, a full house listened as Fuhrman once more condemned the action. "We deplore it and we are here to talk about what we can do." Fuhrman encouraged the "family" of the TC community not to hold back, but to talk about not only the "big horrible events but the little slights." And while noting that TC's percentage of minority faculty is 21 percent - higher than other education schools -- she called that figure "not good enough" and pledged to redouble efforts to do more to recruit additional faculty of color and find financial aid for minority students.

Fuhrman said that specifically the College would be more alert to hiring opportunities even when it is not in a search mode for a particular position: "If there are stellar African Americans, we should be prepared to recruit them."

Students had also called for an increased emphasis on multiculturalism in the TC curriculum, to which Fuhrman said:

"We have 32 courses addressing multicultural issues. That sounds like a lot, but maybe not, and maybe not in the right ways."

She concluded: "So we know there are actions we have to take. We don't want to be in a situation, ten years from now, where people ask, what did we actually do."

James talked briefly about the departmental "self-studies" he has set in motion, involving teams of external faculty members, and suggested that these might be a venue for approaching the question of multiculturalism in the curriculum.

"We might be the number one education school, but so what? There is much more to do. As the chaplain at Harvard once said, "It is not enough to be great; you also have to be good."

Robinson encouraged the community to use this incident to "galvanize us to move forward," while Cammarata said she was heartened to see the student body so fully engaged in the discussion.

Audience members repeatedly expressed the concern that it should not take the severity of a noose on a doorknob for people's experiences with discrimination and prejudice to be acknowledged and validated. Many said while they were shocked to hear of the incident they were not surprised. One student from Virginia said that she keeps hearing people say "'you would expect something like this to happen in the south, but you wouldn't expect it here.'" Yet, since she arrived in 2003, she said, she has found no difference between the north and south.

Some were fearful of speaking out, and asked Professional Staff Executive Committee member Lisa Farmer to speak for them. Farmer said that some people who work in departments where the prevailing sentiment is "this isn't a big deal" have kept quiet because they don't want to be perceived as trouble makers. She also addressed safety concerns, saying that while a noose is a symbol, it's also "a weapon."

"What if it was a gun or a bomb? In light of Virginia Tech and St. John's, how would we be notified and is there a crisis management plan?"

Robinson responded that the school is reexamining its crisis management plan. "We're looking at a text messaging vendor. And we're also trying to address how we can keep an open environment here even as we ratchet up security."

Others observed that whoever hung the noose felt safe enough to do so. One doctoral student said it was no wonder. "As an African American woman, how do you think I feel, and what message do you think is sent with a panel made up of three-quarters white individuals as leaders to help me deal with this when you at the top do not have us as the norm. It sends a message without your saying one word." Fuhrman responded to her charge by saying, "Point well taken."

A math education student told the audience, "Skin color alone doesn't determine diversity," adding that he finds taking a subway to be less stressful than walking through the halls of Teachers College. He said that when asked by a reporter how to be proactive, he responded, "You say thank you; you say hello; you look at people with respect and listen to each other. You don't hide your purse when you see a dark skinned person."

A Columbia University doctoral student, expressing disappointment at a lack of similar response to anti-Muslim graffiti found on Columbia's campus, added, "This isn't a black issue, it is not a TC issue, it is a hate issue, and we need to come together as a community."

While most of the discussion focused on students' experiences and the community as a whole, faculty members were also encouraged to speak out, with some expressing disappointment that more faculty members have not spoken out against the incident.

Saying he is one of only three tenured black male faculty members and the only one under the age of 50, Associate Professor Gregory Anderson said he was discouraged that talk of recruitment has gone on so long without increased results. "It is important we recognize it is not just about recruitment, it's about retention. We know what it is like to be a target."

He went on to say that paradigms for the academy are shifting but that the tenure process does not allow scholars to venture too far from traditional disciplines. "There is a price to be paid when you do new knowledge at an institution that has demanding paradigms. It doesn't fit within what tenure is supposed to look like." A doctoral student studying curriculum agreed. "We cannot think about how broad the problem is unless we approach it from different areas. Multiculturalism is not really being considered within the heart of what we study."

The first student who opened up the floor at the meeting, Shawn Maxam said that, as a community, TC needs to have a model for more widespread discussion about race and class issues if it is going to talk about educating people in urban schools and giving them the best tools. If we don't use those tools, he said, "We are doing a disservice to ourselves and those students."

As a former Diversity Senator on the Student Senate, Maxam added that he's heard people say nothing has changed. "People don't realize issues are being addressed, but we need more open dialogue between the administration and students." Maxam and four other students worked last year with Robinson to write a report on community and diversity for the TC Board of Trustees.

Maxam added that while he believes Robinson is very talented, having three jobs (she serves as TC's general counsel; as Head of the Office of Community and Diversity; and as an Assistant Professor) is a lot of responsibility. "If we prize diversity and community, we should get her some help."

Fuhrman assured him that a position for an Associate Director in that office is in the process of being filled. As the meeting drew to a close, she charged the audience to "hold us accountable" for making the changes discussed, and encouraged everyone to attend other smaller meetings planned around the campus immediately following.

15 posted on 06/24/2008 12:55:38 PM PDT by The KG9 Kid
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To: 11Bush

exactly right


16 posted on 06/24/2008 1:00:40 PM PDT by lonestar67 (Its time to withdraw from the War on Bush-- your side is hopelessly lost in a quagmire.)
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To: The KG9 Kid

“We have 32 courses addressing multicultural issues. That sounds like a lot, but maybe not, and maybe not in the right ways.”
32 stoopid courses! Sheesh!


17 posted on 06/24/2008 1:01:48 PM PDT by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ("Don't touch that thing")
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To: xtinct

Ah, she joins the great legion of lib professors, along with fake Indian Ward Churchill and Michael Bellesiles, fired for plagiarism and/or faking their research, giving that legion a chocolate sauce.


18 posted on 06/24/2008 1:07:24 PM PDT by libstripper
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To: xtinct

Columbia’s human resources dept normally takes at least this long to do anything.


19 posted on 06/24/2008 1:08:24 PM PDT by buck jarret
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To: Parmy
well you can be certain that she won't be called a nappy head ho. Maybe he will call her Dr. noose...heck she plagiarized everyone else why not drag Dr. Suess name down too... :)
20 posted on 06/24/2008 1:11:12 PM PDT by Americanwolf (no matter which way you cut it...barrack obama and hitlery are socialists)
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To: Dr. Bogus Pachysandra
Those are the humanities classes that students not a bit interested in that junk have to take as a requirement to graduate.

Science students have to go listen to some impetuous minority woman rant and rave about her colored vagina for two semesters. Maybe they'll even regurgitate some of that crap in public after they've had too many beers and feel good that they said it until they wake up with a headache the next morning and can't believe they said what they did.

Later, when they're working for some corporation out in the real world, they'll find out that the professor who taught the course they were required to attend ('CCPJ 4902 -- White Racial Identity Dyadic Interactions in Supervision: Implications for Supervisees' Multicultural Counseling Competence') is a complete unhinged moonbat who puts fake nooses on her doorknob to cause a panic right before her ass was tossed in the street for plagiarism.

Then, the former student will reflect back to that one embarrassing night at the off-campus tavern where they swilled too much beer and proclaimed themselves to be in solidarity with feminists of color against the white paternal power structure and they'll resolve never to be fooled again.

Behold, the birth of political awakening!

21 posted on 06/24/2008 1:41:52 PM PDT by The KG9 Kid
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