Thursday, April 24, 2014

Page 1

THE

BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 57

since 1891

THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2014

After plagiarism allegations, prof. was named dean Community Some tenured faculty members in English dept. remain troubled by U.’s handling of the matter By MICHAEL DUBIN UNIVERSITY NEWS EDITOR

The University named Assistant Professor of English Vanessa Ryan an associate dean of the Graduate School in January despite evidence of alleged plagiarism in her published work, according to multiple sources and documents reviewed by The Herald. A University inquiry committee tasked with looking into the matter determined that “Ryan had indeed plagiarized” but cleared Ryan of misconduct on the basis that the mistakes were unintentional, according to the committee’s November confidential final report, a copy of which The Herald has obtained. Thirteen tenured members of the Department of English signed and sent a letter to President Christina Paxson, Provost Mark Schlissel P’15, Dean of the Faculty Kevin McLaughlin P’12 and Vice President for Research David Savitz detailing their dissatisfaction with how the University handled the plagiarism allegations and Ryan’s appointment as associate dean, said Professor of English William Keach, who was one of the thirteen. The alleged plagiarism in Ryan’s first and only book, “Thinking without Thinking in the Victorian Novel,” published by the Johns Hopkins University Press in 2012, came to light in August during the initial phases of her tenure review, according to the inquiry committee’s report. “Without doubt, this represents a serious breach of academic integrity

and academic honesty, values which lie at the heart of the academic enterprise at Brown University and any institution of higher learning,” the committee wrote in its findings. Ryan declined multiple requests for an interview but sent The Herald a written statement. “In August 2013, I learned that my book contains inadvertent errors of attribution, which resulted from mistakes I made in documenting my research as I worked on the project over many years,” Ryan wrote. “I take full responsibility for these mistakes. I notified my publisher immediately, spoke with my chair of department and have been taking steps since then to rectify the situation. Among other things, I have reached out to the scholars whose words lack attribution to speak to them directly and apologize.” Matthew McAdam, acquisitions editor for the JHU Press for classics, humanities and literary studies, confirmed in an email to The Herald that the book is now “out of print and unavailable for purchase” from the press. McAdam did not respond to subsequent emails seeking an explanation of that decision. An external reviewer for Ryan’s tenure case received from an anonymous source a list of passages from her book with language nearly identical to that in other published works and relayed it to the University in August, Keach said. That list, which came from someone who is “anonymous and apparently not a member of the Brown community,” included about 35 such instances, according to the report. The committee identified 27 instances. Last week, The Herald obtained a list containing passages in Ryan’s book that used verbatim language at

length without quotation marks or appropriate citations next to matching passages from the original sources. The Herald has independently verified 33 of these instances of alleged plagiarism in “Thinking without Thinking.” Upon being notified of the allegations against her in August, Ryan searched through her past work and found additional unattributed material in her dissertation, according to the inquiry committee’s report. Ryan talked to Yale faculty members with whom she worked on her dissertation shortly after discovering those errors, Keach said. Ryan has continued to oversee undergraduate research projects this academic year. She also remains an adviser on one senior honors thesis and a second reader for another. Ryan voluntarily stepped away from the graduate dissertation committees on which she had been serving, though the University did not compel her to do so, said a tenured faculty member in the English department who asked to remain anonymous for fear of being fired or sued. Ryan declined to comment when asked to confirm this. In her new role as associate dean, Ryan works on improving graduate student teaching, The Herald reported in January. Schlissel, McLaughlin and Savitz declined multiple requests for comment and interviews for this story. Paxson and Philip Gould, professor of English and chair of the department, did not respond to such requests. Instead, Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and University relations, sent The Herald a written statement on behalf of the administration. “Ensuring academic integrity is central to fulfilling Brown’s mission of teaching, research and service at the

questions sexual assault policies

Petition urging revision of policies gathers almost 2,600 signatures ahead of BUCC meeting By KATHERINE LAMB METRO EDITOR

COURTESY OF BROWN UNIVERSITY

Vanessa Ryan

highest levels,” Quinn wrote. “Expectations of students, faculty and staff are emphasized in the Academic and Student Conduct Codes and in the Faculty Rules. The University takes seriously any allegation of research misconduct and has established confidential processes for assessing allegations of academic and research misconduct.” The process of assessing the allegations of plagiarism played out over the course of several months. In accordance with the faculty rules regarding allegations of misconduct, a three-person inquiry committee was assembled to examine the charges leveled against Ryan. The committee comprised Professor of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences Sheila Blumstein, Professor of History Harold Cook and Professor of Religious Studies Susan Harvey. Cook and Harvey declined to comment, and Blumstein could not be reached for comment by press time. The committee’s final report, delivered to and approved by Savitz in » See RYAN, page 2

Grad students protest denial of sixth-year funding

By EMILY WOOLDRIDGE SENIOR STAFF WRITER

EMILY WOOLDRIDGE / HERALD

inside

A forum will likely be held Tuesday for grad students and deans to discuss a lack of sixth-year funding, President Christina Paxson told protesters.

About 80 graduate students picketed in front of President Christina Paxson’s house Wednesday evening to protest the denial of funding to some grad students seeking to complete a sixth year at the University. Forty-one out of the 81 students who submitted Dissertation Completion Proposals for sixth-year funding were initially informed Friday by the Graduate School that they had been denied funding, said Sara Matthiesen GS, who participated in the protest. The announcement left academic departments scrambling to allocate

News

funds to students whose applications had been rejected, Matthiesen added. As of Wednesday, 69 students will receive sixth-year funding, according to an email sent to the Grad School community Wednesday by Peter Weber, dean of the Graduate School. Over 100 students attended a meeting called by the Graduate Student Council Tuesday night to discuss students’ concerns about sixth-year funding and formulate a plan of action, Matthiesen said. About halfway through the protest, Paxson emerged from her home to address the protesters. She said she plans to hold a forum, likely on Tuesday, for grad students and academic deans to discuss the dispute. When John Mulligan GS asked Paxson if there will be a review of the Dissertation Completion Proposal process, she said this idea would be » See FUNDING, page 3

Commentary

Bologna ’14 and Block ’14 were selected as student Commencement speakers

Colleagues and musicians commemorate Teaching Associate Charles Sherba’s recent death

Dorris ’14: University sexual assault policy falls short in terms of victim protection

Centofanti ’15 and Resnick ’14: JSUB calls for Hillel to embrace diverse stances

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weather

Transparency of funding process criticized by picketers gathered outside Paxson’s house

The day after Lena Sclove ’15.5 publicly revealed the details of her alleged rape and experiences with the University disciplinary hearing process, students circulated a petition Wednesday urging the University to revise its sexual assault policies with more stringent penalties for students found responsible for sexual misconduct. The petition, which was initiated by Emma Hall ’16, was distributed on campus and online starting at 11 a.m., and five hours later, nearly 2,600 signatures had been collected, Hall said. Hall presented the petition at Wednesday’s Brown University Community Council meeting, which aimed to highlight the University’s sexual misconduct policy as a “point of discussion,” according to a campus-wide email sent Tuesday by Margaret Klawunn, interim dean of the College and vice president for campus life and student services. The petition asked that “Brown requires that anyone found responsible for sexual misconduct be suspended until the person they have assaulted graduates, or until two years have passed” ­— whichever is longer, according to the text of the petition. “We’re not here waiting to hear words. We hear words everyday about how Brown cares and how Brown won’t tolerate sexual assault, but it clearly does tolerate sexual assault,” Hall said at the council meeting. “We are here for action, and we’re not going to step down until we see it.” Tuesday evening after her press conference, Sclove created a public Facebook group entitled “Justice for Lena and Survivors Everywhere,” which has already accumulated more than 1,500 members. Much of the planning for the petition, including activism at the University’s A Day on College Hill event and the council meeting, happened publicly online, said Daphne Xu ’14, one of the organizers in the Facebook group. Sclove “told the group of students (at the press conference) that we could use her story for change,” Xu said. “There’s a lot of momentum, and we wanted to show the school how serious we are.” Students debated on the Facebook group about how they wanted to present the issue to prospective students at ADOCH. They eventually decided to print paper versions of the petition to » See BUCC, page 6 t o d ay

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