• Harvard president Claudine Gay is now accused of botching study that la

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 27 08:31:15 2023
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    XPost: sac.politics, alt.society.liberalism

    Harvard's embattled president is facing yet further questions about her academic record, after a statistics expert challenged the data used in a
    report which helped win her tenure at Stanford.

    Claudine Gay, who took over as president in July, has been at the center
    of a firestorm since the October 7 Hamas attacks. She was seemingly slow
    to condemn students who justified the terrorist violence, and slow to
    speak out against antisemitism on campus.

    The harsh spotlight has spread to her academic record, with accusations of plagiarism - and on Tuesday, a data scientist challenged her analytical methods. It was then revealed that she had refused to share her data,
    raising eyebrows in academia.

    Jonatan Pallesen, a Copenhagen-based data scientist working for the Confederation of Danish Industry, tweeted that he had examined her use of
    data in her PhD thesis, and a 2001 American Political Science Review
    (APSR) paper.

    The 2001 paper - 'The Effect of Black Congressional Representation on Political Participation' - was one of four peer-reviewed political science articles which secured her 2005 tenure at Stanford.

    https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/12/27/03/79358053-12902737-image-a- 54_1703646471197.jpg

    https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/12/27/03/79358059-12902737-image-a- 55_1703646484936.jpg

    Gay had received an undergraduate degree in economics from Stanford
    University and a Ph.D. in government from Harvard, before returning to
    Stanford to teach.

    In 2006, she joined Harvard's faculty, serving as a professor of
    government and of African and African American studies. She became dean of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences in 2018.

    Pallesen found that the 2001 paper was misleading, and incomplete.

    'I am not a political scientist, but I am pondering about the whole
    approach of her study,' he said.

    Christopher Brunet, a contributing editor at The American Conservative,
    then followed up on Pallesen's concerns in The Dossier, and found that Gay
    had refused to share the data which informed her conclusions.

    Two professors - Michael C. Herron, a quantitative social science
    professor at Dartmouth, and Kenneth W. Shotts, a professor of political
    economy at Stanford Graduate School of Business - told a 2002 conference
    of The Society for Political Methodology that she would not share her data
    or code with them.

    'We were, however, unable to scrutinize Gay's results because she would
    not release her dataset to us (personal communication with Claudine Gay, 2002),' they noted.

    The professors said the statistical practice Gay used in her research
    often leads 'logical inconsistencies.'

    But, Brunet finds, their criticism of Gay was removed from the website.

    Brunet said that Gay's refusal to share her data was 'shameful'.

    Herron, the professor who in 2002 criticized her, told The New York Post
    that Gay was just one person they looked at when discussing data analysis.

    Also on Tuesday, it emerged that two Harvard board members and four
    faculty held a private dinner where they reportedly discussed a culture of 'self-censorship' on campus, amid growing outrage over the school's
    response to the Israel-Hamas conflict.

    The four professors in attendance on Tuesday said they didn't address the elephant in the room for the Ivy League institution - Gay's uncertain
    future as president - despite reports stating otherwise.

    Harvard Law School professor Jeannie Suk Gersen, Psychology professor
    Steven A. Pinker, lecturer Flynn J. Cratty, and former Harvard Medical
    School Dean Jeffrey S. Flier were present along with board members Tracy Palandjian and Paul J Finnegan.

    The dinner at Bar Enza in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was first reported by
    the New York Times, - and it sparked rumors that Palandjian and Finnegan
    could be breaking ranks with the Harvard Corporation's decision to stand
    by the beleaguered president.

    Gay, who took office in July this year, sparked fury during a
    congressional hearing after she said that it depended on context whether
    calls for the genocide of Jews at Harvard constituted harassment and
    violated the rules.

    According to the Times, Palandjian said that 'replacing the university's president might not be going far enough to get Harvard back on course' -
    but each of the professors who were at the dinner told the Harvard Crimson
    the topic did not even come up.

    Pinker told the Crimson he had 'no memory of Palandjian saying she
    supported Gay's resignation.'

    'That would have been a bombshell I could not possibly have forgotten,' he said.

    Cratty described the dinner as a 'very frank and friendly conversation
    about ways Harvard can grow in its commitment to civil discourse and
    diversity of thought'.

    'We did not discuss or request President Gay's removal,' he added.

    According to the Times, Palandjian also said Harvard needed 'generational change' - but Gersen wrote in a statement to The Crimson that she didn't 'specifically recall Tracy Palandjian using the language of 'generational' change at Harvard.'

    'But if she did, it was not about possibly replacing the President or
    members of the Corporation, as that was not the conversation we were
    having,' Gersen said.

    Harvard spokesman Jonathan L Swain said the dinner was 'a constructive and positive conversation about the importance of academic freedom, civil
    discourse and intellectual diversity.'

    'The discussion of 'generational change' occurred in that context; that addressing such a vital and complex societal issue would not happen
    overnight, but would take time,' Swain said. 'It was not related to any individual at Harvard.'

    Meanwhile, Flier previously told the Times and the Wall Street Journal he urged Palandjian and Finnegan to do more to address the anti-Semitism
    furor threatening to envelop the Ivy League school.

    'You need to be more out front of this,' Flier recalled telling the execs,
    as he spoke with the New York Times. 'If people are saying the university
    is making mistakes, they are talking about you!'

    Finnegan and Palandjian did not immediately respond to requests for
    comment from DailyMail.com.

    Danielle Rhoades Ha, a spokesperson for the New York Times, wrote in a statement that the publication is 'confident in the accuracy of our
    reporting and stand by the story.'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12902737/claudine-gay-harvard- 2001-academic-paper-data-reviewed.html

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