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Intimidation at Columbia
The New York Times ^ | April 7, 2006 | Unsigned

Posted on 04/07/2005 9:47:34 AM PDT by Piranha

Columbia University has been roiled for months by a contentious dispute over allegations of intimidation of students in the Middle East studies program. Sad to say, the school has botched the handling of this emotionally charged issue from the start, thereby allowing festering concerns to erupt into a full-scale boil.

A faculty committee's report, released last week, cited the frustration of students who felt they had no place to register complaints about what they considered abusive treatment by outspokenly pro-Palestinian professors. The university had no clear mechanism to handle such grievances.

Only after a film by an outside group brought the students' complaints to broad public attention did the university appoint a panel to look into the issue. It botched this job, too, by appointing one member who had been the dissertation adviser for a professor who had drawn criticism and appointing three members who had expressed anti-Israel views that, critics allege, might incline them to soft-pedal complaints. It also limited the panel's mandate to include only some of the areas of complaint.

People involved in the deliberations believe that the panel proceeded carefully and objectively in evaluating the evidence, but its composition ensured that the results would be greeted with skepticism. The members aren't to blame for that - it's the fault of the administration, which approached the project with such political ineptitude. Fortunately, Columbia is belatedly rising to the challenge. It will establish new grievance procedures shortly. And it has recognized that the Middle East studies department was out of control and, with the goal of strengthening its scholarship, has wrested away its power to appoint and promote faculty.

Only one member of the department, Joseph Massad, was judged clearly guilty of inappropriate conduct. The panel found that he had replied angrily and heatedly to a student who had simply asked whether Israel sometimes gave advance warning before bombing a building so people could get out and avoid harm. It also cited a second "gray area" incident, when the same teacher, in an off-campus lecture, responded testily to an Israeli student who had served in that country's armed forces by asking how many Palestinians he had killed. Had that incident occurred in the classroom, the panel concluded, it would clearly have been out of bounds.

Given the generally high marks accorded the panel by dispassionate observers, its findings seem to indicate that the controversy over Middle East studies at Columbia has been overblown. There is no evidence that anyone's grade suffered for challenging the pro-Palestinian views of any teacher or that any professors made anti-Semitic statements. The professors who were targeted have legitimate complaints themselves. Their classes were infiltrated by hecklers and surreptitious monitors, and they received hate mail and death threats.

But in the end, the report is deeply unsatisfactory because the panel's mandate was so limited. Most student complaints were not really about intimidation, but about allegations of stridently pro-Palestinian, anti-Israeli bias on the part of several professors. The panel had no mandate to examine the quality and fairness of teaching. That leaves the university to follow up on complaints about politicized courses and a lack of scholarly rigor as part of its effort to upgrade the department. One can only hope that Columbia will proceed with more determination and care than it has heretofore.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Israel
KEYWORDS: academia; bias; columbia; columbiau; liberals; palestinians; reproach
Amazing. The New York Times has an editorial about Columbia's pro-Palestinian bias in the Middle East Languages and Cultures Department, and I can't find a word with which I disagree (I did read it quickly...).

I feel like posting this in Breaking News. The New York Times is accusing Columbia of being intellectulaly dishonest in excluding bias, but only investigating intimidation, in assessing the program.

I have to believe that corrective action will result.

The question is how broad the corrective action will be.

1 posted on 04/07/2005 9:47:36 AM PDT by Piranha
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To: rmlew

Ping


2 posted on 04/07/2005 9:47:57 AM PDT by Piranha
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To: Piranha

Unless the University sets up a mechanism to evaluate the quality and fairness of teaching, the same situation can recur again and again.

In my opinion, President Bollinger is erring in limiting the ability of the University to control the education its students receive. This attitude, if unchecked, will prove to be a destructive force to Columbia's reputation.

Severe damage already has been done. President Bollinger should get on top of the problem, or resign.


3 posted on 04/07/2005 9:51:31 AM PDT by Piranha
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To: Piranha
Actually, the report only "investigated" 3 of 62 reported incidents. Moreover, there was no mandate to look at grading, curricula, or the influience of political beliefs.
Whoever wrote the peice for the NY Times did not bother to read the directions for the Ad Hoc Grievence Committee or its full findings.
4 posted on 04/07/2005 9:56:59 AM PDT by rmlew (Copperheads and Peaceniks beware! Sedition is a crime.)
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To: Piranha

My money is on very little action, if any. Cosmetic action, at best.

Maybe I'm pessimistic.


5 posted on 04/07/2005 10:21:48 AM PDT by HowardDeanScream08
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To: SlowBoat407; cyborg; Rodney King; Piranha; Pitiricus; Seeing More Clearly Now; lancer; Ohioan; ...
The NY Times runs another editorial on Columbia, trying to sweep away their complicity with early coverage by chastising both sides. The problem is that it set up a center based on false pretenses.
The spin continues.
6 posted on 04/07/2005 10:49:02 AM PDT by rmlew (Copperheads and Peaceniks beware! Sedition is a crime.)
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
7 posted on 04/07/2005 10:55:16 AM PDT by SJackson (You simply have to accept the fact that we are all corrupt-Mahmud Abbas to senior UN official, 1996)
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To: rmlew

The NYT probably employs an inordinate number of Columbia graduates : )


8 posted on 04/07/2005 11:19:46 AM PDT by international american (Tagline now fireproof....purchased from "Conspiracy Guy Custom Taglines"LLC)
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To: All
Whitewash at Columbia
9 posted on 04/07/2005 11:50:56 AM PDT by rmlew (Copperheads and Peaceniks beware! Sedition is a crime.)
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To: Piranha

For the New York Times, with its long history of anti-Israel articles and headlines, to say in print that there's anti-Israel radical left bias at Columbia means that the infiltration of that campus' establishment by international Marxists must be really, really, really bad. These haters of the U.S. and Israel were allowed to spread lies across the curriculum in the name of intellectual freedom. This is what a U.S.Ivy League education has come to.


10 posted on 04/07/2005 4:42:57 PM PDT by Seeing More Clearly Now
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To: Piranha
I found myself saying amazing too. It was this that had me floored:

"But in the end, the report is deeply unsatisfactory because the panel's mandate was so limited. Most student complaints were not really about intimidation, but about allegations of stridently pro-Palestinian, anti-Israeli bias on the part of several professors. The panel had no mandate to examine the quality and fairness of teaching. That leaves the university to follow up on complaints about politicized courses and a lack of scholarly rigor as part of its effort to upgrade the department. "

This is my problem too with the whole way the controversy has been framed to exclude the content of courses and focus on professorial behavior alone. The bais of the content must be raised.

11 posted on 04/07/2005 5:02:18 PM PDT by dervish (Let Europe pay for NATO)
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To: Piranha

Columbia.....proudly being on the wrong side of every issue since 1965.


12 posted on 04/07/2005 5:38:52 PM PDT by international american (Tagline now fireproof....purchased from "Conspiracy Guy Custom Taglines"LLC)
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