Texas A&M Threatens Professors Who Suggest Students File Open Records Requests
from the the-future-of-journalism dept
A large group of journalists are publicly protesting a policy at Texas A&M University, which effectively threatens professors who suggest students file open records requests to do investigative reporting on the University itself. The specific policy, which has been in place for a while, officially bars university employees from filing open records requests as a part of their jobs. But it appears that Texas A&M is now interpreting this to mean that journalism professors cannot suggest that journalism students use open records laws in investigating the university itself. In other words, the university wants its staff to teach journalism, but not if that journalism involves uncovering wrongdoing by the university itself. Not surprisingly, the "clarification" of the rules came after some students filed open records requests showing that an A&M campus (Tarleton State University) "failed to fully comply with a federal law requiring schools to disclose crimes on and adjacent to campus."Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Texas A&M Threatens Professors Who Suggest Students File Open Records Requests
a policy at Texas A&M University, which effectively threatens professors who suggest students file open records requests
The specific policy, which has been in place for a while, officially bars university employees from filing open records requests as a part of their jobs. But it appears that Texas A&M is now interpreting this to mean that journalism professors cannot suggest that journalism students use open records laws in investigating the university itself.
From a title that says professors have been directly threatened, to lightening it up with "effectively threatened" (in other words, they did not), down to "appears" in a very short amount of time.
Why not just tell the real story. The University has a policy, and as part of the policy, they have asked staff not to instruct the students on how to specifically do an open records request against the school (but doesn't limit any other teaching of how to do so against other institutions).
It is still an interesting story, and doesn't need the over hyped headline to make it work out.
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That would be a threat.
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http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/threat
No one is ever threatened with losing their job.
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That tautology looks painful.
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Besides the whole semantic issue around "threaten" -- see Shawn's post below -- you appear to be minimizing the university's abuse of their own policy. Forbidding its student from filing open records requests was not "part of the policy" applicable to employees. By all indications, Texas A&M pulled a completely new policy out of its ass and just called it a "clarification" of an existing policy. That's the real story.
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As an example, they cannot be required to make such as request as part of a paper or project.
Texas A&M pulled a completely new policy out of its ass and just called it a "clarification" of an existing policy. That's the real story.
You and I both know that is the real story. But TD decided that the real story is the "threat", because it makes for a much more sensational headline. It's National Enquirer journalism at it's finest.
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No one is suggesting that they did, so I fail to see the relevance of your statement. The story is about the university's actions against its employees, not against (at least directly) its students.
But TD decided that the real story is the "threat"
You must not have read the posts where others have clearly showed that there was a threat or are in denial that the univiersity's actions constitute a threat. I would agree that it would have been much more clear if Mike would have included the text from the linked article quoted by Shawn, but the headline is still accurate.
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Oh did I edit that unfavorably. You should fire me.
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Sounds like a threat to me.
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Bureaucratic Stupidity at its finest
Logically, it is an employee's duty not to bring discredit on the employer's business. A journalism school seems the perfect place to debate this - what level of (mis?) behaviour by the employer constitutes such egregious conduct (love that phrase!) that it is the employee or student's duty to air that dirty laundry? At what point does airing dirty laundry step over the line from "free speech" to "causing damage"?
Stupidity comes when a bureaucracy, under the guise of protecting their hindmost parts, manages to draw attention to both the process and the liklihood that the action is because they have something to hide. "Don't look behind the curtain or else!" They said that so a bunch of investigative journalist wannabees could hear loud and clear ... Duh!! I hope they added extra staff to deal with the flood of requests for information.
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Re: Bureaucratic Stupidity at its finest
When it's a public, federally funded institution, then IF there is any such line (how that could be fails me), it falls well short of public scrutiny regarding adherence to federal law.
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If the student was writing an article about the school and submitted a draft without having done an open records search, what the hell is the guy supposed to do? Overlook it? Mark down the grade with no explanation?
"Sorry, Smith, but this is going to be an F unless you fix it before deadline."
"Oh, what'd I miss?"
"---"
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"A&M System spokesman Rod Davis said the policy has nothing to do with Malone and is based on a system rule that has been in place since 1997. Andrew Strong, the system's general counsel, told Tarleton officials in October that the rule bars system employees from submitting open records requests to units of the system while acting in their official capacity."
One that the professor should have read before working there. Here's what the professors/students are allowed:
"Although the policy limits what faculty members can assign students to do, the students themselves are still free to file information requests with units of the system, Davis said. In addition, he said, faculty members acting as private citizens, as opposed to in their official capacity, may file requests as well with the system."
So as long as the professor did it on his own time, it was fine. What a threat! The workplace is not a democracy, regardless of what you want to believe.
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"the rule bars system employees from submitting open records requests"
Statement 2:
"the policy limits what faculty members can assign students to do"
Do you not see the difference between Statements 1 and 2? A major point of the TD post is that the original rule was Statement 1 and then, when the university realized that something was going on it didn't like, it "clarified" i.e. redefined Statement 1 to include Statement 2.
The difference between the two statements is not some technicality. It's a key distinction.
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I'm sorry, but you can't just arbitrarilly add in "or anyone else" to an existing rule/law/policy and call it a "clarification". It materially changes the meaning of the policy by broadening its impact exponentially. This is no more a clarification than when a politician makes a verbal flub in public and their PR team issues a statement the next day saying that they meant the exact opposite of what they said.
It could very well be legal for the university to have changed its policy to include the "or anyone else" clause, but the fact that they just issued a "clarification" indicates to me that they simply didn't want to go through the hassle. "We're in charge, so just do what we say" was probably the thought. But even if they did change the policy officially, it wouldn't change one of the main points of the post, that Texas A&M is being hypocritical.
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Yes, but how is that relevant at all? So, you not only think that arbitrarilly adding "or anyone else" to an existing policy is OK because it's just a "clarification", but you think that you can do the same thing with "or involved with"? Please.
Otherwise they could just get anyone else to do the work of filing for them, perhaps their secretary? This is how it works in the real world.
Excuse me, but in the real world, rules, policies, and laws have to be enforced as written, not as some bureaucrat chooses to interpret them for them own self-protecting reason.
As for your example, it's meaningless because a professor's secretary is still an employee of the university. You'll note that the policy applied to all employees, not just professors.
Besides, we're not talking about a policy like making a new pot of coffee if you take the last cup. Filing requests for information like those discussed in the article are a key skill of a journalist. It couldn't be any more obvious that Texas A&M doesn't want its own students poking around into its internal affairs.
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You stole the words right from my mouth. No? Let's review in short form the conversation above:
Me: WHO broke a contract?
You: THIS contract!
Me: (blink, WTF? - blink, blink)
No shit, that contract! I noticed the first time 'round that there's a policy in play. My point is that no matter how you want to twist it, this guy didn't break it. Furthermore, he was doing exactly what he's supposed to do. If a Journalism professor is not allowed to teach students how to dig up facts for their stories, then he's really just an 8th grade English teacher toting around a Pulizter.
Obviously a student publication is going to be about issues at the university campus. It's a fundamental part of his job to teach students the process to get the facts right for those stories. The way the policy is worded, it's clear that he can't do any of that for them. He wouldn't want to do that anyway, it's their job to do it as part of the work of journalism.
To suggest that he shouldn't teach them how or direct them to do so is patently stupid. Their pretending that by properly instructing them in the practical basics of their field of study he is somehow harming the university is why this is so ridiculous. If he doesn't do that, he's not teaching journalism. The reason the UT prof said it "looks like something that would be in the Onion," is because requiring a journalism teacher to skip over the practical basics of how to do journalism, OR else suggesting that the students should only be shown how to report stories on other schools is too stupid to be real.
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If he was doing exactly what he's supposed to do we wouldn't be having this comment pissing match. By the way I thought you said "short form"? Where in the policy does it say to file orders requests for the students? I'm sure there are many other ways the professor could have pointed out resources to help the student file, but he did not. Every job worth having has policies that go with it. Those policies are part of the contract. You rant about the way you think it should be, and ignore what's there. I haven't "twisted" anything, and your BS won't change that.
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Google translation: "If you weren't wrong, I wouldn't disagree with you." Wow! Put that in a bottle and give it to the world! You just solved for world peace in our lifetime!
"By the way I thought you said "short form"?" Exactly, I summarized the conversation in three lines (an' you sed AH don' reed good).
"Where in the policy does it say to file orders requests for the students?" Where in any of the reports does it say that he did anything of the sort? Again, it feels as though we're reading separate stories.
"Every job worth having has policies that go with it. Those policies are part of the contract." Agreed, but you don't just get to play willy-nilly with those rules to expand them however you like just because you're-the-employer-and-y-golly-the-way-you-say-it-is-the-way-it-is.
"You rant about the way you think it should be, and ignore what's there." What's there is a violation of the public trust from a public institution making threats with the intent of chilling free speech, in a manner that is probably illegal, citing a policy that is also probably illegal.
"I haven't "twisted" anything, and your BS won't change that." Hulser already nailed you on this. As your response failed to rebut the argument, I'm happy to let his comment stand, pending something more sound than a nanny-nanny-boo-boo.
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Take offense if you must. My initial reaction was to venture the hope that you weren't siding with the university administration against the very foundations of democracy, that you weren't supporting the baseless expansionist interpretation put forward by their attorney, and that surely you weren't, without any supporting facts, accusing this professor of something that not even the school administration has been willing to assert that he has done. Clearly I was wrong to hope. As for the ending, I was simply pointing out that your closing remark, "I haven't "twisted" anything, and your BS won't change that," isn't really an argument but rather the rhetorical equivalent of, "So there!"
Shall we overlook your hypocrisy in starting and ending with far more harsh insults yourself? Hey, why not? It's the holidays and I'm feeling generous.
"You ignored all my points and went through the quote by quote breakdown of my comments." You do know that you've just described the very process by which one would address your points? If you've made a salient point that I did not address, by all means highlight it in your reply. I'll do my bestest.
"You're a vet of the stupid wars."
Well, I am now! (I know I wanted to overlook that, but then you did it again.)
"My responses refuted all your BS,"
Now we see why you side with the Condemneat Argumentum, We-said-it-so-it-must-be-so club. You're not just the president; you're also a member!
"...but you're too busy trying to pull eloquent out of a horse's ass."
Feel free to be as ineloquent as you would like.
Have a nice day.
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Kollege
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In 2011 we'll start to see the signs of the education bubble pop.
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No it isn't. An employee may feel an obligation to hide wrongdoing of their employer out of a sense of loyalty or sheer self-preservation, but if you're talking about "duty", that word would be more appropriate to the higher obligation to be a whistleblower for wrongdoing.
At what point does airing dirty laundry step over the line from "free speech" to "causing damage"?
"Free speech" and "causing damage" are independent. Short of things like yelling "fire!" in a movie theatre, one's right to say something in public, especially when it's true, is not dependent on an analysis of whether it will damage anyone else, especially when the anyone else was doing wrong.
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You are way off the road here. There is no indication of any hiding of wrongdoing, or any claims of some conspiracy to hide any specific wrongdoing. There is no obligation for the staff to hide what they know is wrong. They are told only not to make freedom of information requests of the school (ie, digging for wrongdoing), and not to instruct their students to do it either.
The question of the original rule being legal or not is another discussion. Contract terms vary from state to state, so who knows really?
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I addressing your statement, speaking generically about an hypothetical employee, not the employees in question. You said it's "an employee's duty not to bring discredit on the employer's business". This specific statement is not true.
The question of the original rule being legal or not is another discussion.
Agreed. What they did may be perfectly legal. But the reason that this situation is a story is that the university is clearly being hypocritical, on one hand promoting investigative journalism and attempting to stymie it on another hand when it relates to itself.
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Wasn't that argument tried against the First Amendment and labeled as prior restraint?
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Interesting....
Sounds very very much like there's some corruption going on the administration doesn't want exposed. This being so, where are the employed journalists, and why aren't they filling requests to find out who's dirty here?
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