Posts filed under 'Education'

Open access now mandated at Harvard

Revere at Effect Measure reports that Harvard is now mandating that all faculty research in the School of Arts & Sciences be made available to the public immediately.

“The Harvard requirement mandates immediate free publication online in a Harvard hosted repository, searchable by Google and other search engines. Thus Harvard authors are not supposed to publish from now on in some extremely high profile journals like Nature and Science who prohibit fee access of papers for a period of time after publication. Whether these journals will publish Harvard papers under these conditions now is a question we don’t know the answer to. It could get very, very interesting.”

This is good news for Open Access, which I support in principle. But there  is a problem. Many of us do much of our research and writing without funding. Open Access generally works by having the authors pay. When there is a funded grant, this is fine. But for some of us in smaller institutions which won’t pay te cost, this is a disincentive. I imagine that scholars in third world countries will also have problems with cost. Some mechanism needs to be developed to distinguish between funded and non-funded research.

2 comments February 16th, 2008

African-American psychologist at Columbia victim of hate crime

African-American psychologist Madonna Constantine, Professor of Psychology and Education at Columbia University Teachers College was targeted Tuesday with a noose on her door. It appears that, since the Jena 6 case got wide publicity, the incidence of noose incidents on campuses has spread. Here are two articles from the Columbia Spectator, the first on this incident and its aftermath, the second on protests at the school:

No Suspects Yet in Noose Incident
By Joy Resmovits

As hundreds of students, professors, and city leaders gathered Wednesday to protest the hanging of a noose on the office door of an African American Teachers College professor, police said that there were no suspects yet in the criminal investigation of the incident.

Officials said Wednesday that they were considering the incident aggravated harassment as a hate crime. Investigators reported that the noose had not been on the door of Professor Madonna Constantine’s office as late as 11:30 p.m. Monday night and that it was found on Tuesday by one of Constantine’s female colleagues, who reported it to the police. The NYPD, which noted that this was the first noose case in at least five years, said officials are interviewing all of professors in Constantine’s department.

Meanwhile, Columbia’s campus continued to react to the event. At an afternoon rally outside of Teachers College, Constantine made her first public appearance since the hate crime was perpetrated. As Constantine exited Zankel Hall, the crowd exploded with cheers.

Constantine thanked those present for the “overwhelming support” for her in light of the “heinous and highly upsetting incident.”

“I would like us to stay strong,” Constantine said. “I would like the perpetrator to know that I will not be silent. Hanging a noose on my door reeks of cowardice on many, many levels.”

Teachers College students held signs and chanted within police barriers on 120th Street. After a prayer and a moment of silence, the students marched around Columbia’s campus and the surrounding streets chanting.

Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer and New York state senator Bill Perkins spoke out from Zankel’s steps. Perkins discussed the symbolism of the noose, adding that he was troubled that someone with a CUID and knowledge of TC’s labyrinthine halls perpetrated the incident. “It’s as if a burning cross was placed on the campus of Columbia University,” he said. “This sounds like an inside job.”

While top TC administrators—including TC President Susan Fuhrman and Provost Thomas James—were present, Columbia University representatives were not. “Where is Bollinger? Where is Bollinger?” one protester chanted.

Bollinger, meanwhile, was at a meeting with a number of student leaders— chiefly representing cultural groups—where students grilled him on his handling of the incident and voiced sentiments that Columbia’s campus was hostile towards students of color. While Bollinger said he offered his support to Teachers College, he emphasized that it was a separate institution from Columbia.

The Chaplain’s Office and the University Provost have scheduled a common meal in response to the TC hate crime for Thursday at 6 p.m. in Earl Hall.

Tom Faure and Josh Hirschland contributed to this article.

Second article:

Students Call For Reform at Teachers College

By Joy Resmovits

A simple piece of rope—looped, knotted, and left on a office door in Teachers College two days ago—sat at the center of a firestorm Wednesday as members of Columbia’s community sought to make sense of its chilling symbolism.

Many students and administrators, both from within and beyond Teachers College, voiced outrage and called for change in the school’s culture at pair of official gatherings. A TC town hall, scheduled before the incident, featured a panel of college administrators and a student senator in a crowded Cowin Auditorium, while University President Lee Bollinger led a heated meeting with student leaders in Lerner Hall.

Others turned to rally on 120th Street, where students wearing black shirts cheered for Constantine as she made her first public appearance since the discovery of the noose.

“I’m upset that our community was exposed to such an overwhelmingly blatant act of racism.” Constantine said. “Hanging a noose on my door reeks of cowardice on many, many levels.”

The rally also featured a moment of silence, prayer, chanting, and appearances by Fuhrman, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, and New York State Senator Bill Perkins, D-Morningside Heights and West Harlem.

Stringer said he would support the victim. “You will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law because your poison can be infectious,” he said.

“I share your shock and outrage. This is an abhorrent act,” Fuhrman told the assembled crowd. She added, “We will have the first chance as a family … to share our feelings. … It won’t be just talk, but actions. This has to stop.”

Protesters walked through the campus and around 119th Street chanting “No more nooses” and “Hey hey, ho ho, racism has gotta go,” drawing the attention of many onlookers. They continued chanting as they made their way toward Cowin Auditorium for the town hall meeting.

At the forum, about 600 members of the Teachers College community gathered to hear Fuhrman and Provost Thomas James speak.

Fuhrman called the incident “so incongruous with what we want to believe about ourselves.” She said that students and faculty should be accessible and helpful to police, express their feelings openly, and take action.

“I am in pain. I am in anger,” said Janice Robinson, director of the Committee for Community and Diversity who sat on the panel with Fuhrman and James. “We have to use this moment to galvanize us.”

Fuhrman said the incident occurred as TC was trying to increase diversity and awareness, especially by bolstering the accessibility of financial aid. And last spring, Fuhrman appointed James in an effort to increase diversity among faculty. Still, as a professor pointed out at a TC town hall meeting, there are few tenured full-time African-American professors at the school.

Many students complained about a pervasive feeling of racism at Teachers College. “I totally was not surprised, shocked, when it happened,” TC student Nicole Woodard, who is black, said. “It’s scary when I go into a lecture, I can count on my fingers how many people look like me. … Why could this person feel comfortable putting a noose on the door? He should have been shaking.”

Some said they were uncomfortable speaking about race in class, saying there is little diversity, and they expressed concerns that professors whom they may challenge control their grades. “Race is the white elephant in the classroom,” TC student Shawn Maxam said.

“I want to thank the person who put the noose up,” said Dawn Arno, director of TC EdZone Partnership, a group of students who teach in Harlem. “If the soil is not fertile, the seed cannot grow,” referring to the event’s potential to raise awareness.

Many students lined up to express emotions and suggested changes, such as creating an open space for students to voice concerns about diversity. Jonathan Jungblut, TC, received applause when he suggested that Teachers College create a post for a “special master who deals with race, sex, and gender who … advocates for issues.”

Teachers College administrators discussed TC’s programs and curriculum, and the possibility of making institutional changes. The school is currently undergoing a self-study to examine how race can be addressed across the institution.

“The administration is supportive in bigger ways than you probably realize,” Robinson responded after the Town Hall.

While the forum gave students a chance to discuss their emotions, many continued to feel shaken after the event. “I’m still crying every time I think about the physicality of what it must have felt like for her [Constantine],” Alyson Vogel, a program development specialist who works with Constantine, said after the town hall.

While some said they were pleased that the school dedicated time for the event, others were disappointed by the one-hour length and shortage of concrete initiatives.

“They cut it off prematurely as people were still lined up,” Nick O’Mahony, TC, said. “What does this say?”

James said it was cut off because the space was already reserved for other meetings and forums, and Fuhrman had to leave to speak with the media.

Some students were upset that the administration did not use the time to create policy. “I want some hope. They left me high and dry,” Lisa Robinson, TC, said.

“There are things underway that we’re extending, but we’re not today making policy decisions now,” James said in an interview. “We’re trying to support Madonna Constantine.”

The students who organized the rally met again in the TC dining room with Robinson last night. At the meeting, students deemed the event a success, and discussed plans for the future. They want to form a coalition that will last after they graduate, and make fighting racism a priority for the school.

“People are already over it, but we have some momentum,” Jasmine Alvarez, TC senate representative, said.

On Wednesday, students will have another opportunity to voice their concerns and discuss solutions with administrators at the state of the college address.

Joy Resmovits can be reached at joy.resmovits@columbiaspectator.com.

[Thanks to Ken Pope for calling attention to this.]

1 comment October 11th, 2007

School discipline, the “new” racist frontier

The world has become aware through the story of the Jena 6, that racism is alive and well in our nations schools. Yesterday I posted the horrific story of the racist attack in the school lunchroom on a schoolgirl who dropped a piece of cake in Palmdale, CA [see this post and this one]. Perhaps most horrifying was that, when the girl’s mother, a school system employee herself, went to talk to the school administration and demanded that the racist guard be arrested, the mother was arrested instead. [Also arrested were a student who filmed the guard's brutal attack on a cell phone, and that student's sister.] The entire school administration there seems to consider it their God-given right to attack and abuse black people.

Now the Chicago Tribune shines further light on the magnitude of racism in school discipline across the country. The Tribune analyzed carefully hidden US Department of Education data that show tha, in 49 out of 50 states, black students are far more likely to suffer sever discipline [suspensions or expulsion] than are white students committing similar offenses.

As a result, across the country blacks are 3.1 times as likely as whites to be suspended and 2.9 times as likely to be expelled. In my state of Massachusetts, the rations are 2.4 and 2.7 respectively [see state breakdowns here].

While socioeconomic factors play a role, the disparities remained when socioeconomic status was statistically controlled.

Every American citizen should be horrified by these statistics, as we should be by the Jena 6 and the Palmdale cases. These cases and statistics show clearly that our society is at war with young black people, criminalizing and declaring them deviant in multitudinous ways. First we suspend and expel them from school, then we arrest and imprison them in their millions. Racism still seems central to American culture. Its seems especially important, given the violence of our culture, for Americans to have a despised minority always at hand. It is hard to see how this will be changed, but changed it must be.

Here is the Chicago Tribune article [it can be downloaded as a pdf here]:

School Discipline Tougher on African Americans

by Howard Witt

AUSTIN - In the average New Jersey public school, African-American students are almost 60 times as likely as white students to be expelled for serious disciplinary infractions.

In Minnesota, black students are suspended 6 times as often as whites.

In Iowa, blacks make up just 5 percent of the statewide public school enrollment but account for 22 percent of the students who get suspended.

Fifty years after federal troops escorted nine black students through the doors of an all-white high school in Little Rock, Ark., in a landmark school integration struggle, America’s public schools remain as unequal as they have ever been when measured in terms of disciplinary sanctions such as suspensions and expulsions, according to little-noticed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education for the 2004-2005 school year.

In every state but Idaho, a Tribune analysis of the data shows, black students are being suspended in numbers greater than would be expected from their proportion of the student population. In 21 states-Illinois among them-that disproportionality is so pronounced that the percentage of black suspensions is more than double their percentage of the student body. And on average across the nation, black students are suspended and expelled at nearly three times the rate of white students.

No other ethnic group is disciplined at such a high rate, the federal data show. Hispanic students are suspended and expelled in almost direct proportion to their populations, while white and Asian students are disciplined far less.

Yet black students are no more likely to misbehave than other students from the same social and economic environments, research studies have found. Some impoverished black children grow up in troubled neighborhoods and come from broken families, leaving them less equipped to conform to behavioral expectations in school. While such socioeconomic factors contribute to the disproportionate discipline rates, researchers say that poverty alone cannot explain the disparities. “There simply isn’t any support for the notion that, given the same set of circumstances, African-American kids act out to a greater degree than other kids,” said Russell Skiba, a professor of educational psychology at Indiana University whose research focuses on race and discipline issues in public schools. “In fact, the data indicate that African-American students are punished more severely for the same offense, so clearly something else is going on. We can call it structural inequity or we can call it institutional racism.”

Academic researchers have been quietly collecting evidence of such race-based disciplinary disparities for more than 25 years. Yet the phenomenon remains largely obscured from public view by the popular emphasis on “zero tolerance” crackdowns, which are supposed to deliver equally harsh punishments based on a student’s infraction, not skin color.

That’s not what the data say is happening. Yet the federal Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights, which is charged with investigating allegations of discriminatory discipline policies in the nation’s public schools, has opened just one such probe in the past three years. Officials declined requests to explain why.

There’s more at stake than just a few bad marks in a student’s school record. Studies show that a history of school suspensions or expulsions is a strong predictor of future trouble with the law-and the first step on what civil rights leaders have described as a “school-to-prison pipeline” for black youths, who represent 16 percent of U.S. adolescents but 38 percent of those incarcerated in youth prisons.

Relatively few school districts scattered across the country have begun to acknowledge the issue of racial disparities in discipline and tried to do something about it.

In Austin, after administrators discovered that black youths accounted for 14 percent of the school district’s population but 37 percent of the students sent to punitive alternative schools, they introduced a program in some schools based on encouraging positive student behaviors rather than punishing negative ones.

At one school, Pickle Elementary, which serves mostly Hispanic and black students, the results were dramatic-disciplinary referrals dropped from 520 in 2001-2002 to just 20 last year.

“I am not going to give up on a child and suspend him or send him to an alternative school,” said Julie Pryor, who was the principal of the school when the behavioral program was implemented and is now a district administrator. “Washing our hands of a child will never change his behavior, it just makes it worse. These are children. It’s up to us to be creative to find ways to help them behave.”

But academic experts say many more school administrators, when confronted with data showing disparate rates of discipline for minority students, react like officials in the small east Texas town of Paris and strenuously deny accusations of racial discrimination.

Paris is the sole school district in the nation currently under investigation by the federal Education Department to determine whether higher discipline rates for black students there constitute institutionalized discrimination. The probe has been under way for more than a year.

“The school district has been a leader and very progressive when it comes to race relations,” Dennis Eichelbaum, the attorney for the Paris Independent School District, said in an interview earlier this year.

That perspective is not shared by the families of many of Paris’ black students, who make up 40 percent of the school district’s nearly 4,000 students.

“They say there’s no racism here, but if you go inside a school and look in the room where they send the kids for detention, almost all the faces are black,” said Brenda Cherry, a Paris civil rights activist who assembled some of the complaints that sparked the federal investigation. “Unless black people are just a bad race of people, something is wrong here.”

Exactly why black students across the nation are suspended and expelled more frequently than children of other races is a question that continues to perplex sociologists.

Socioeconomic factors are certainly at play, researchers believe.

“Studies of school suspension have consistently documented disproportionality by socioeconomic status. Students who receive free school lunch are at increased risk for school suspension,” according to “The Color of Discipline,” a 2000 study by Skiba and other researchers in Indiana and Nebraska. Another study concluded that “students whose fathers did not have a full-time job were significantly more likely to be suspended than students whose fathers were employed full time.”

But those studies and others have repeatedly found that racial factors are even more important.

“Poor home environment does carry over into the school environment,” said Skiba, who is widely regarded as the nation’s foremost authority on school discipline and race. “But middle-class and upper-class black students are also being disciplined more often than their white peers. Skin color in itself is a part of this function.”

Some experts point to cultural miscommunications between black students and white teachers, who fill 83 percent of the nation’s teaching ranks. In fact, the Tribune analysis found, some of the highest rates of racially disproportionate discipline are found in states with the lowest minority populations, where the disconnect between white teachers and black students is potentially the greatest.

“White teachers feel more threatened by boys of color,” said Isela Gutierrez, a juvenile justice expert at the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition, a watchdog and policy group. “They are viewed as disruptive. What might be their more assertive way of asking a question, for example, is viewed as popping off at the mouth.”

Nor has the decline of court-ordered integration across the nation and the gradual resegregation of urban schools in recent decades made much difference in disciplinary rates. Even in urban schools where most of the students are black, black youths are still disciplined out of proportion to their population, the data show. In Washington, D.C., for example, black students are 84 percent of the public school population but 97 percent of the students who are suspended. Other researchers believe that zero-tolerance policies, which encourage teachers and administrators to crack down on even minor, non-violent misbehavior, are exacerbating racial disparities. Some states, such as Texas, are so zealous that they have criminalized many school infractions, saddling tens of thousands of students with misdemeanor criminal records for offenses such as swearing or disrupting class.

The school security climate, in turn, can reinforce race-based expectations about which students are most likely to require discipline.

“Most suburban schools, where the students are more likely to be white, purchase security equipment that is meant to protect children-for example, hand scanners that make sure that the parent/guardian picking up the child is legitimate,” said Ronnie Casella, an expert on the criminalization of student behavior at Central Connecticut State University. “In contrast, urban schools choose equipment such as metal detectors and surveillance cameras that are meant to catch youths committing crimes.”

The new behavioral program being tried in Austin, and some 6,500 schools nationwide, seeks to turn zero tolerance on its head in a bid to slash the number of suspensions, expulsions and other punishments meted out by teachers.

Called “Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports,” the intensive regimen requires a commitment from an entire school, including training of students in the behaviors that are expected of them and re-education of teachers and administrators in the use of positive motivational techniques.

The interactions of individual teachers with their students are minutely scrutinized by a team of experts to pinpoint communication breakdowns, and specialized counseling teams are deployed to work with students who present the most serious discipline issues so that classroom teachers are not left to deal with the problems on their own.

“Most schools use a get-tough, punish-the-kids kind of perspective, which results in the kinds of racial disciplinary disparities we see across the country,” said George Sugai, a professor of education at the University of Connecticut who helped create the positive behavioral program. “We come at it from the other perspective: If you teach kids the behaviors that are expected, you have a greater likelihood of success. It’s really more about changing how adults interact with kids than it is about changing the kids.”

Schools like Pickle Elementary in Austin that are using the positive behavioral program often report sharp reductions in their disciplinary referrals. But Skiba, who is currently studying the effectiveness of the program, cautions that it does not always eliminate racial disparities.

“They’ve been very successful at reducing rates of suspension and expulsion while making schools function more effectively,” Skiba said of the schools using the program. “But if you look at the data by race, what you find is that some discrepancies still exist. It’s not enough to put this program in place and say, ‘We are happy to reduce our rates of suspension,’ because what we might have done is reduce our white suspensions and increase our African-American suspensions. There’s just no silver bullet for this problem.”

Add comment September 30th, 2007

Pledge for freedom, not God

When I wa i school, I sometimes got in trouble for refusing to say the Pledge of Allegiance. I couldn’t understand how we could have “one nation under God” when, I thought, there was no God. Further, a country that had gone through a civil war hardly sounded indivisible. And it didn’t seem to me that Sacco and Vanzetti had gotten “freedom and justice for all.”   As I had been taught not to lie, I refused to utter the false words. Some teachers were outraged, and others amused. In those days I was always alone in my “protest.”

Now I read in Effect Measure in the Sunday Freethinker Sermonette that 50 students at Boulder High School have walked out, and will continue walking out every Thursday to protest the pledge. They object to the forced religion, and to its ignoring of the need for respect for the diversity of our population and of the fundamental rights upon which our country claims to be founded. I salute them.

As Revere quotes from the Denver Post:

About 50 Boulder High School students walked out of class Thursday to protest the daily reading of the Pledge of Allegiance and recited their own version, omitting “one nation, under God.”

The students say the phrase violates the constitutional separation of church and state.

They also say the daily reading of the pledge over the school public address system at the start of the second class takes away from education time and is ignored or mocked by some students.

A state law passed in 2004 requires schools to offer the opportunity to recite the pledge each day but does not require students to participate.

The protesting students, members of the Student Worker Club, want administrators to hold the pledge reading in the auditorium during each of the school’s two lunch periods for any students who want to participate.

Otherwise, they said, they plan to walk out each Thursday when the pledge is read and recite their version, which omits the reference to God and adds allegiance to constitutional rights, diversity and freedom, among other things.

But go to Effect Measure and see Revere’s suggestion for a better alternative Pledge.

Add comment September 30th, 2007

More on Palmdale racist attack on student by school guard

Another local news station has more details on the brutal racist attack by a school guard on a student, and the arrest of her, her mother, a student who filmed the guard’s attack and the photographer’s sister:

Student Gets Broken Arm in Melee with School Security Guards

PALMDALE, CA — Parents and students at Knight High School in Palmdale, California are upset over an incident in which three teenagers and a mother were arrested last Thursday after a melee with security guards, prompting an investigation into the guards’ behavior.

The incident came on the heels of a birthday celebration during the school’s lunch hour, at some point the birthday cake was dropped, spurring a domino effect of mayhem.

A cell phone video taken by a student showed a 16-year-old student arrested by campus police.

According to the student, she had dropped the cake and subsequently cleaned it up.

When the security guard told her to clean up a part of the mess that was overlooked, a verbal altercation ensued — and quickly turned physical.Guard attacks student

The security guard then grabbed her by the arm as she was headed towards her next class, the student said.

The student said that the security guard was so overzealous in twisting her arms despite her pleas otherwise that he wound up breaking her wrist — which is cast-bound.

The security guard called her a “nappy-head,” the student said.

The student said that when the security guard realized the incident was being recorded, he tackled the student taking the video.

When that student’s sister tried to intervene, she too was injured and now has a brace on her arm.

And the plot thickens.

When the arrested student’s mother arrived at the school, she was subsequently arrested for allegedly battering the principal.

The mother has subsequently said that the incident has caused a disruption in her life, mainly as a result of explaining the issue of prejudice to her daughter.

Another parent, Serena Ochoa, said that she has complained about the guards before.

The student is currently expelled and will attend a hearing to determine her future status with the school.

4 comments September 29th, 2007

In the land of the free, school girl attacked by racist school guard for dropping piece of cake. Girl and mother arrested.

Racism permeates our county’s schools, as the Jena 6 case demonstrates. Now another case from Palmdale, CA illustrates the depth of the problem. A high school girl who dropped a piece of cake was assaulted by a school guard, had her wist broken, and was called “nappyhead” by the guard. She was then arrested and suspended from school. When her mother demanded the guard be arrested, the mother was arrested and then fired from her job by the school system. Also arrested was the student who took pictures on his cell phone of the the guard’s attack, as well as his sister, were also arrested.

Here is the local news report:

If we had a decent country, Palmdale would now be flooded with Federal Marshals who arrest the school officials for their hate crimes. A decent country just would not tolerate horrifying abuses like this.

3 comments September 29th, 2007

Earlham College Psychology Department calls for APA interrogations policy change

The Psychology Department at Earlham College (in Richmond, Indiana) has broken new ground by passing a resolution calling upon change in the American Psychological Association to change its policy regarding participation of psychologists in interrogations. Thanks to Michael Jackson, here is the resolution:

RESOLUTION CONCERNING PARTICIPATION OF PSYCHOLOGISTS IN MILITARY DETENTION CENTERS

WHEREAS psychologists in the United States, through their major professional organization, the American Psychological Association (APA), have adopted a set of ethical principles that includes the principle of Beneficence and Nonmaleficence (Principle A), which declares that psychologists should strive, in their work, “to do no harm” and should “seek to safeguard the welfare and rights of those with whom they interact” and the principle of Respect for People’s Rights and Dignity (Principle E), which declares that psychologists should “respect the dignity and worth of all people” and explicitly recognizes that “special safeguards may be necessary to protect the rights and welfare of persons or communities whose vulnerabilities impair autonomous decision making”; and

WHEREAS the United States military and Central Intelligence Agency are widely recognized and acknowledged to have incarcerated a number of persons in foreign detention centers without the due process of law ordinarily afforded by international human rights treaties and standards and to have subjected many of these detainees to forms of interrogation banned under international law, including some forms of torture; and

WHEREAS the American Psychological Association adopted a resolution on August 19, 2007 that, while condemning torture, continues to allow coercive interrogations so long as these interrogations do not cause “significant pain or suffering” or “lasting harm,” and that continues to allow psychologists to participate in interrogations in foreign detention centers in which internationally recognized due process of law is not afforded, and that in continuing to permit these violations of Principles A and E of the APA Ethical Principles and Code of Conduct, serves to legitimize the above mentioned violations of human rights and to undermine the moral authority and stature of psychology as a profession, and that, moreover, fails to recognize that decades of research in social psychology demonstrates that situational factors, especially in highly ideological and isolated settings, can be predicted, over time, to undermine the resolve of well-intentioned individuals, including psychologists, to resist institutional pressures to misuse authority;

The Department of Psychology of Earlham College therefore resolves

1. that the direct or indirect participation by psychologists in interrogations of prisoners incarcerated in foreign detention centers that do not afford prisoners internationally recognized due process of law is unethical; and

2. that the American Psychological Association should prohibit the participation of psychologists, directly or indirectly, in interrogations in these facilities.

The resolution is accompanied by a letter:

Dear Friends

The Psychology faculty of Earlham College is contacting some of our colleagues in other institutions with interests in human rights and issues of peace to invite your Psychology Department to join us in condemning the involvement of psychologists in illegal interrogations and to call on the American Psychological Association to take a clear and unambiguous stand on the issue.

As you may be aware, on August 19, 2007, the APA Council of Representatives passed a resolution condemning torture. However, that resolution, while well-intentioned and important in many ways, still permits psychologists to participant in coercive interrogations so long as these interrogations do not cause “significant” pain and suffering or “lasting” harm, and therefore constitutes a violation of Principle A of our code of ethics; it also continues to permit psychologists to be associated with agencies or facilities in which prisoners are deprived of due process of law, a violation of Principle E. Most troubling of all, by allowing psychologists to continue to participate in the interrogations of detainees in secret military and CIA facilities, it continues to aid in legitimizing these interrogations and facilities.

The main justification offered for APA’s position is that psychologists attending military or CIA interrogations can serve an oversight function and act as “whistleblowers” if these interrogations cross the line into abuse or torture. While such oversight is theoretically possible, and may actually occur in some instances, we psychologists, of all professionals, understand (or should understand) just how difficult and atypical such resistance to authority is and how unrealistic it is to base organizational policy on the expectation that individuals in these settings will routinely or reliably act as whistleblowers. We have only to look at the classic work of Milgram, Zimbardo, Asch, Loftus, Janis, and others to recognize how much more likely and predictable it is that these psychologists will gradually succumb to the relentless “power of the situation” and tend over time to align themselves, implicitly or explicitly, with the practices of their employing institutions.

We will be forwarding the attached resolution to the American Psychological Association. We hope that other psychology departments in other educational institutions will join us in passing similar resolutions and that, together, we can serve as a conscience for APA. If you have any comments or questions, please feel free to contact me at jacksmi@earlham.edu.

Sincerely,

Michael R. Jackson
Convener
Department of Psychology
Earlham College

7 comments September 28th, 2007

Lautréamont on Plagiarism

 From Scott Horton’s No Comment:

Lautréamont on Plagiarism

Plagiarism is necessary. Progress implies it. It holds tight an author’s phrase, uses his expressions, eliminates a false idea, and replaces it with just the right idea.

Comte de Lautréamont (Isidore Ducasse), Poésies II (1870)(S.H. transl.)

Recent claims of plagarism, where a few phrases in a many hundreds page book are copied almost exactly, without quote marks, especially when the original source is copiously cited, perfectly illustrate this point,

Note to my students: This does not mean you can copy your paper from the internet, or your fellow students!

Add comment June 27th, 2007

High school students tell President Bush to stop torture

Fifty high school seniors in the Presidential Scholars program gave President Bush a letter asking him to stop torture and respect human rights:

Scholars urge Bush to ban use of torture

President Bush was presented with a letter Monday signed by 50 high school seniors in the Presidential Scholars program urging a halt to “violations of the human rights” of terror suspects held by the United States.

The White House said Bush had not expected the letter but took a moment to read it and talk with a young woman who handed it to him.

“The president enjoyed a visit with the students, accepted the letter and upon reading it let the student know that the United States does not torture and that we value human rights,” deputy press secretary Dana Perino said.

The students had been invited to the East Room to hear the president speak about his effort to win congressional reauthorization of his education law known as No Child Left Behind.

The handwritten letter said the students “believe we have a responsibility to voice our convictions.”

“We do not want America to represent torture. We urge you to do all in your power to stop violations of the human rights of detainees, to cease illegal renditions, and to apply the Geneva Convention to all detainees, including those designated enemy combatants,” the letter said.

The designation as a Presidential Scholar is one of the nation’s highest honors for graduating high school students. Each year the program selects one male and one female student from each state, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Americans living abroad, 15 at-large students, and up to 20 students in the arts on the basis of outstanding scholarship, service, leadership and creativity.

1 comment June 26th, 2007

Upcoming Conference. War, Torture and Terror: The Role of Psychology

The Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at Yeshiva University is sponsoring a conference:

War, Torture and Terror: The Role of Psychology
Friday, June 22, 2007,
9 AM – 4 PM at the
Geraldine Schottenstein Center
239-241 East 34th Street, NYC

Schedule:
9 – 9:35 AM Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:35 – 10 AM Welcome
Shara Sand, PsyD, Chair;
Assistant Director of Clinical Training,
Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University

Opening Remarks
Lawrence J. Siegel, PhD
Dean,
Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University

10 – 10:45 AM Invited Address
The Development of Psychological Torture: A Modern
History of Coercive Interrogation and Its Effectiveness

Shara Sand, PsyD *
Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychology;
Assistant Director of Clinical Training,
Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University

10:45 – 10:55 AM Questions and Answers

10:55 – 11 AM Abraham Givner, PhD, Conference Co-Chair;
Director, School-Clinical Child Psychology Program,
Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University
11 – 11:45 AM Invited Address
The Role of Psychologists in the Global War on Terror;
Professional and Ethical Considerations

Michael Gelles, PsyD *
Consultant, Washington, DC; Former Chief Psychologist,
Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS)

11:45 – 12 NOON Questions and Answers

12 NOON – 1 PM Lunch

1:15 – 2 PM Invited Address
Torture, Ethics and the Consequences of Complicity
Leonard Rubenstein, JD
Executive Director, Physicians for Human Rights

2:15 – 3:30 PM Concurrent Workshops:
I. Torture Across the Generations: The Chilean Project of
Theater Arts Against Political Violence

Steven Reisner, PhD, International Trauma Studies Program,
Columbia University; New York University, Psychoanalytic Institute
This workshop will present videotapes and discussion from a theater Arts Against Political Violence project addressing the experience of two generations of Chileans who experienced torture under Pinochet. Theater Arts Against Political Violence consisted of a psychoanalyst, a director, and an international group of actors; its mandate was to work with survivors of severe human rights violations to create works of theater derived from such experiences. In the material presented, the needs of the younger generation for revenge are positioned along with the needs of the older generation to find meaning. The presentation will offer a live performance
attempting to represent and give meaning to the complex interface of trauma between generations. It will also offer tapes of the dialogue
between the members of the two generations of survivors
that inspired the artists.

II. Human Rights Violations in Homophobic Persecution
Leanh Nguyen, PhD, Senior Psychologist at the Bellevue/
NYU Program for Survivors of Torture; Candidate at the
NYU Postdoctoral Program for Psychoanalysis; Independent
Practice in NYC
Homophobic persecution is a global epidemic that has not been discussed in the context of torture or human rights violation. Often categorized as a “bias” crime, it is treated as having cultural/religious roots and is not considered in the politics of human rights advocacy. The author, who has been involved over the past five
years with victims of homophobic persecution, will present clinical data on homophobic violence from various parts of the world, on the psychic injuries sustained by its victims, and on the implicit conceptions of their human rights in the hands of advocates, law enforcers, and healthcare providers.

III. Therapeutic Responses to Displaced African Female
Survivors of Sexual Violence

Adeyinka M. Akinsulure-Smith, PhD, Assistant Professor,
The City College of New York; Psychologist at the Bellevue/
NYU Program for Survivors of Torture
Sexual violence against women has been used as a weapon in numerous recent conflicts (Bosnia, Sierra Leone, Darfur). This workshop will focus on the nuances and extent of the crime of rape. Establishing an environment of trust and safety is essential, and because individual therapy can be a foreign concept, group therapy is frequently employed. Clinical aspects of working with survivors of sexual violence, war trauma survivors, refugees, asylees and asylum seekers will be explored.

IV. Riding Two Horses: The APA’s Support for Interrogations,
Psychological Ethics, and Human Rights

Edward J. Tejirian, PhD, Independent Practice,
New York City
In 2005, the APA Presidential Task Force on Psychological Ethics in National Security Investigations (PENS) was formed and opposed any participation by psychologists in torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment. The report also said that psychologists could play a vital role in interrogations in settings such as Guantanamo that have been denounced as being in violation of the UN Convention Against Torture. The APA Board of Directors invoked a little-used rule to adopt the PENS report as APA policy without consultation with the membership, resulting in a complex controversy within the APA. This workshop will invite participants to
look at and discuss both sides of that controversy.

V. From Trauma to Tragedy: How Holocaust Survivors
Rebuilt Shattered Lives

Carl Auerbach, PhD** and Shoshana Mirvis, PsyD*
During the Holocaust, six million Jews were systematically annihilated in Nazi-run concentration camps and ghettos. Despite enduring years of incomprehensible horror, many survivors managed to begin anew and lead apparently normal lives. This workshop will focus on exploring this question of survival and resiliency. The survivors’ experience will be explored through the lens of a theory of structural dissociation.

VI. Defining Evil, the Depravity Standard and War Crimes
Michael Welner, MD, Chairman, The Forensic Panel;
Associate Professor of Psychiatry, NYU School of Medicine;
Adjunct Professor of Law, Duquesne University School of Law;
Special Consultant, ABC News
Judges and juries both across the United States and in other countries who decide that a crime is “depraved,” “heinous,” or “horrible” can assign more severe sentences. There is no standardized definition for such dramatic words. The Depravity Scale research aims to establish societal standards of what makes a crime depraved, and to develop a standardized instrument based on specific characteristics of a crime that must be proven in order to merit more severe sentences. This instrument distinguishes not who is depraved, but rather what aspects of a given crime are depraved and the degree of a specific crime’s depravity.

3:30 – 4 PM Open Forum Discussion
Shara Sand, PsyD, Moderator

Download a brochure here, register online here.

1 comment June 12th, 2007

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