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Date: Tue, 31 Mar 1998 15:01:20 -0800
From: Sid Shniad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Universal Access Canada <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Academia in Cyberspace

The Los Angeles Times                   Tuesday, March 31, 1998

Home Edition
Section: PART A
Page: A-1

COLUMN ONE

A WARY ACADEMIA ON EDGE OF
CYBERSPACE

As colleges put more information online and propose alliances with
firms like Microsoft, some faculty fear uncompensated use of their
course materials and even loss of jobs as 'distance learning' expands.

                By Kenneth R. Weiss
                Times Education Writer

        When UCLA administrators announced last fall that they would
create Internet Web sites for nearly every undergraduate class, they
expected a chorus of cheers to greet this newest step into academic
cyberspace.  Then came the jeers. And they came from a group that looked
unusually distinguished for college rabble-rousers--the faculty.
        At one meeting, a white-haired professor in gray tweed warned
colleagues not to allow their course materials on the World Wide Web
without a formal protest. Another in a natty bow tie cautioned that UCLA
could not be trusted with their ideas--hadn't administrators tried to cash in
on a medical school staffer's plot for a TV hospital drama?  Then English
professor Jonathan Post stood, folded his arms across his blue blazer and
declared: "I'm here because I'm a techno-paranoid."
        No one laughed.
        Indeed, although many university faculty members embrace the
Internet and other tools of computerized instruction, others--particularly
the old guard--are suspicious of higher education's mad dash into the
Information Age:
        Will bosses eavesdrop on their online exchanges, chilling academic
freedom? Or will outsiders hack into supposedly secure Web sites and steal
their ideas?
        How can professors keep their independence if schools are seduced
by profits from corporations that mass market online courses?
        Although it is easier to answer questions at your leisure by e-mail,
what is lost when faculty lose face-to-face contact with students?
        Does "distance learning" diminish a professor's ability to inspire as a
mentor or motivate as a nag?
        And with the likes of Microsoft--Microsoft!--moving into the
college market, how long will it be before online courses push the delete
button on teaching jobs?
        "The real problem," said Mary Burgan, secretary-general of the
American Assn. of University Professors, "is that administrators and
lawmakers are selling technology as a substitute for faculty."
        Such concerns have touched off a frenzy of e-mail around
California State University's 22 campuses since a partnership was proposed
with Fujitsu, GTE, Hughes Electronics and Microsoft.
        The firms promise to spend $300 million on a fiber-optic backbone
connecting the campuses in exchange for the right to sell a projected $3.8
billion in high-tech products over the next decade.
        So just try convincing James L. Wood, a San Diego State
sociologist, that the online network won't be used--despite official denials--
to profit off faculty work.
        "I don't know how they can make the kind of money they want to
make without selling faculty lectures," Wood said.
        "Will professors who teach, say, Biology 101 find they are no
longer needed if such introductory courses can be taught online by star
professors on other campuses?"
        To leaders of academia, especially in California--the home of
Silicon Valley and the birthplace of the Internet--such fears are hopelessly
behind the times. They see the computer as the perfect tool to bring the
university together through instant communications--while sharing its
wisdom around the world.
        Today's students own laptops and expect dorm rooms to be wired
for easy Internet hookups, enabling them to e-mail their professors at 2
a.m.--or make dates. The fledgling California Virtual University already
offers more than 700 classes from dozens of colleges. Schools in 14 other
states are plunging into distance education through the Western Governors
University.
        No one has pushed this new era more than University of California
President Richard C. Atkinson, whose own research was touting the use of
computers to teach math three decades ago. But even he considers it
healthy that there's skepticism about cyberspace.
        "There is nothing wrong with paranoia," he said. "In the early
stages, there may be some missteps. It's important for people to question
these things. There should be alarmists out there."

Spreading the Word

        When it comes to ringing alarm bells on campus, few have an edge
over David F. Noble, a social historian whose books focus on how
technology has displaced workers and altered society.
        At York University in Toronto, Noble was a leader of a faculty
strike last spring in which technology was a major issue. After 55 days on
the picket line, professors won a unique provision in their contract: None
can be forced to use technology in classrooms or deliver courses over the
Internet.
        A visiting professor this year at Harvey Mudd College in
Claremont, Noble has spread his gospel by giving talks at UCLA, UC
Irvine and other campuses. His writings also have made the rounds--
ironically, via the Internet.
        His article, "Digital Diploma Mills: The Automation of Higher
Education," argues that "universities are not simply undergoing a
technological transformation. Beneath that change, and camouflaged by it,
lies another: the commercialization of higher education."
        The first phase began a decade ago, he asserts, when changes in
patent laws gave universities greater incentives to market their research.
Now, he adds, slick new multimedia vehicles make it even easier to profit
off professors' knowledge, through copyrighted videos, courseware, CD-
ROMs and Web sites. And schools can shave costs by employing "fewer
teachers and classrooms."
        Meanwhile, companies such as Microsoft, Disney and Simon &
Schuster are moving into an "edutainment" market that Lehman Brothers
estimates will be worth billions of dollars a year.
        Noble, 52, has taken special interest in UCLA--where the Internet
began in 1969--because of its move to create Web sites for all 3,300
undergraduate courses in the College of Letters and Science by the end of
this academic year, with or without faculty blessing.
        "They have gone after the dock workers, the auto workers and the
steel workers," he said. "And now, they are coming after us. A lot of
faculty say, 'There is no way they can automate what I do.' And they are
right. But they will automate anyway and take the loss in the quality of
education. This is not about education. This is about making money."
        After Noble spoke at a UCLA luncheon, one professor said he
heard colleagues ask: "Why are we being forced to do these things? Are
you going to take my courses and offer them to the world? These courses
are our intellectual children, and we don't want anybody mucking around
with them."
        UCLA administrators have been scrambling to calm the waters. In a
March 4 memo, Brian Copenhaver, provost of the College of Letters and
Science, assured department chairs that there are "no plans" to use Web
sites commercially and that "no member of the faculty will be 'mandated' to
make any use of the Web that he or she finds inappropriate."

Content Criticized

        The Web sites have drawn some student protests, one outside the
chancellor's office. But their main gripe is the $10 to $14 add-on fee per
course to help fund a $4-million Educational Enhancement Initiative, which
also includes Web sites for each student.
        Students' main criticism of the class sites is that most are, well,
boring--merely online versions of handouts they get in class anyway.
        For the most part, that's not the doing of the professors. They don't
have to do anything to the sites, which are created by technicians using the
syllabus and other materials instructors routinely turn over to their
departments.
        To an outsider, a syllabus may not seem like much. It's usually an
outline of topics covered in a course, including homework, required
readings and a bibliography.
        To faculty, however, the syllabus is the distillation of years of
knowledge and teaching experience. The best, they say, are essentially the
outline for a book.
        The UCLA Faculty Assn. newsletter dredges up a celebrated
episode from the 1970s, when Gail Sheehy got a UCLA psychiatry
professor's permission to sit in on his popular course on adult life stages,
inspiring her book "Passages." The professor filed a plagiarism suit and
won a settlement.
        "Easier access to course syllabi on the Web will make 'borrowing'
of this kind even more frequent," the newsletter said.
        In the past, only a small percentage of professors--usually in
medicine, engineering and hard sciences--worried about such matters.
        If a professor's research using campus laboratories led to the
discovery of, say, gene-splicing, the university would claim ownership of
the patent and share the royalties. But a professor who wrote a textbook
about medieval Europe kept the copyright and worked out his own deal
with a publisher.
        Now, new commercial possibilities have caught the eye of college
business offices.
        At UCLA, music professor Robert Winter--working outside the
university--mixed a dazzling display of sound and images on CD-ROMs
that sold hundreds of thousands of copies and made him rich enough to
build a big house in Pacific Palisades, with its own multimedia studio.
        So the school has placed him in charge of the UCLA Center for
Digital Arts, with the goal of inspiring others to do cutting-edge work on
campus, under negotiated deals for sharing the take.
        "The more commercial potential," Winter said, "the larger the share
the university will offer the faculty member."
        When universities traditionally ponder profits, he noted, "the social
sciences, the humanities and arts have been marginalized. But in this new
digital revolution, they are at the center."
        The shifting rules produce uncertainty among professors who never
have had to share their intellectual property rights with their employer.
        Then comes Noble, passing around documents covering online
classes for the huge UCLA Extension program--suggesting that the school
will own rights to courses.
        Noble has found similar language in UC Berkeley Extension's
contract with America Online and the University of Colorado's contract
with Real Education, a private firm working with Microsoft.
        All these, he argues, are "beachheads" in a commercial incursion
into academia. He wonders what will become of their classes as they are
marketed for a mass audience.
        "We're talking about the 'Disney-fication' of courses," Noble said.
"They will be packaged to meet the market, just like television. Why settle
for me, when you can have the writers for 'Seinfeld' write the script? That's
where we're headed."

Uneasy Alliance

        Then there's the specter of Microsoft, inspiring fears like those
aroused in other eras by the Rockefellers, Standard Oil and other symbols
of capitalist power.
        This fake news story has been making the rounds of campuses
throughout the state:
        "Microsoft Corp. announced today it will be acquiring the
California State University for an undisclosed sum. 'It's actually a logical
extension of our growth,' said Microsoft chairman and CEO Bill Gates."
        The mock news story--spread by e-mail, of course--also has Cal
State's chancellor "enthusiastically" becoming a Microsoft vice president at
"several times" his $250,000 salary. In a prank with a similar theme,
Humboldt State University students changed a campus sign to read,
"Microsoft State University."
        To UC Berkeley folklorist Alan Dundes, such parodies reflect a
human need to ventilate their anxieties through humor. The fear in this
case? "That technology is not serving us, it's controlling us."
        Cal State administrators fueled that apprehension by proposing the
biggest deal ever between a public university and the private sector. Under
the proposal, Cal State and its four partners would form a company to
build high-speed computer and telephone networks in the 22-campus
system, the largest group of universities in the nation.
        Cal State would contribute its $95-million-a-year technology
budget and the four companies would kick in $300 million. To recoup that,
the companies would get first crack at selling everything from laptop
computers to pagers and telephone service to 336,000 students and
thousands of faculty members, staff and alumni.
        University officials consider this a creative way to finance badly
needed campus technology in an era of declining dollars from Sacramento
and widespread opposition to raising student fees.
        They liken the deal to paving the Information Superhighway right
to each campus lab, classroom and dorm room. The private partners, they
say, will exercise no control over who or what speeds along it.
        The assurances, however, have not ended concerns that the private
companies will turn this highway into a training ground for their new
products--or worse, render instructors into road kill.
        The breadth of the opposition "took us by surprise," said James
Rosser, president of Cal State L.A. and head of a systemwide committee
on technology.
        To reduce faculty concerns, the university's negotiators first
eliminated any portions of the proposal that would give the companies
influence over online course content. Now they are debating whether to
ask Microsoft to step down as a partner.
        "We don't want to get sucked into the national debate over whether
Microsoft is a monopoly," said Richard West, Cal State's senior vice
chancellor for business and finance.
        The negotiators are trying to wrap up the deal quickly so faculty
can review it before it's presented to the Cal State trustees in mid-May.
Waiting longer would delay a decision to the summer and probably set off
complaints from professors that the university was trying to sneak it
through while they were away.
        Such faculty members insist they are not modern-day Luddites, the
19th century English textile workers who smashed labor-saving machinery.
        "I'm a mathematical physicist, so I've had an occasion to use
computers in my research," said David Klein of Cal State Northridge.
"They are valuable tools, but there are limits."
        Like most critics of online instruction, Klein views himself as a
guardian of the university's core mission to broadly educate students about
themselves and their subject matters.
        He cringes at the prospect of students taking courses in their living
rooms, calling that "an exotic version of a bachelor's degree by mail."

Haves and Have-Nots

        Wood, the San Diego sociologist, argues that you would never see
this at elite private colleges. Sure, they have wired dorms and will sell some
training online, as Stanford University does to Silicon Valley engineers. But
Wood doubts such places would teach undergraduates philosophy by
computer.
        "Down the ladder, when you get to community colleges, where
there are poorer students of ethnic minority backgrounds, this is the group
ticketed for distance education because it is good enough for them," he
said.
        Of the 771 courses available through the California Virtual
University, 323 are offered by community colleges--and only 99 by the
most elite state system, the University of California.
        Perhaps not surprisingly, the discontent seems more prevalent
among senior faculty, brought up in an era when ideas were scratched out
on legal pads. Although most seem to have embraced the digital revolution
to some degree--dashing off electronic missives to colleagues around the
globe--even near-universal e-mail systems are suspect to some.
        After years of wrangling, the University of California is about to
adopt a policy to reassure faculty that administrators will be able to
monitor e-mail over the campuses' computer networks only in suspected
cases of sexual harassment, criminal activity, violations of collective
bargaining contracts and for various emergencies. In practice, e-mail
monitoring only occurs a handful of times a year on any single campus.
        That's not enough peace of mind for some professors. Sally Stein, a
UC Irvine art historian, wants no worry that someone might be
eavesdropping.
        "I don't engage in extremely private communications with my
students, but sometimes things come up," she said. "This is particularly true
with undergraduates, who are late adolescents sorting out a lot of things in
their lives."
        Her solution? She's switched to a commercial e-mail system.

PHOTO: Professor David Noble has been warning his colleagues of "the
'Disney-fication' of courses."
PHOTO: UCLA's Brian Copenhaver in the school's new computer lab.
PHOTO: At right, a protest at Humboldt State.


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