>From Chronicle of  Higher Education [forwarded by Free Lee]

Videos 'Ripped' From Online-Course Footage Bring Threats to Instructors

By Peter Schmidt

The University of Missouri system has been besieged with angry letters
and phone calls, and top officials at its St. Louis campus have asked
an adjunct faculty member to resign, as a result of the conservative
blogger Andrew Breitbart's posting videos this week that appear to
show two labor-studies instructors advocating union violence.

A contributor to Mr. Breitbart's Web site produced the two videos,
which run roughly seven minutes each, from about 30 hours of lecture
footage taped as part of a distance-education course and uploaded onto
the university's Blackboard course-management system.

Because the footage includes depictions of students in the classroom
and was supposed to be accessible only to faculty members, students
enrolled in the course, and university technical-support personnel,
its wide-scale online distribution has raised concerns about students'
privacy rights and the unauthorized use of online course footage to
put colleges' faculty members under political pressure.

Mr. Breitbart declined Thursday to comment or respond to allegations
that the videos were selectively edited to look incriminating.

After Mr. Breitbart's Web site posted the videos on Monday, the
university system initially responded with a statement distancing
itself from the comments that the lecturers are depicted making.
"Obviously, the comments on the video do not reflect the position of
the University of Missouri," said the statement from Jennifer
Hollingshead, a system spokeswoman. Officials at the St. Louis and
Kansas City campuses, where the lectures were delivered, "are looking
into the situation," her statement said.

On Thursday, however, Gail Hackett, provost of the University of
Missouri at Kansas City, issued a statement denouncing how the videos
are presented on Mr. Breitbart's Web site, based on the campus's
continuing review of the raw classroom footage used to make them.

"From the review completed to date," her statement said, "it is clear
that edited videos posted on the Internet depict statements from the
instructors in an inaccurate and distorted manner by taking their
statements out of context and reordering the sequence in which those
statements were actually made so as to change their meaning. Such
selective editing is disturbing, and the release of students' images
without their permission is a violation of their privacy rights."

'A Hatchet job'

The statement from Provost Hackett nonetheless said the St. Louis
campus "has accepted the resignation of its lecturer."

But on Thursday, Don Giljum, the adjunct instructor at the St. Louis
campus who is depicted in the videotapes, went from saying he planned
to resign that day to saying he had not tendered his resignation and
was reconsidering his decision to do so.

Mr. Giljum said he had been told by his immediate supervisor at the
St. Louis campus, Deborah Baldini, associate dean for continuing
education, that both the campus's chancellor and provost had called
for him to resign, even though he had never been given a chance to
discuss with them the allegations made in the video. Mr. Giljum said
the only opportunity he has been given to defend himself was a brief
conversation with Ms. Baldini in which, he said, he told her the
statements he is shown making in the video "were taken totally out of
context and completely edited. It is nothing but a hatchet job by this
person who wants to destroy unions and destroy labor education."

The administrators' request for his resignation "is a huge mistake on
their part," Mr. Giljum said, arguing that, based on the videos, "they
are going to sacrifice academic freedom and the open and free-flowing
exchange of thoughts and ideas between teachers and students."

Regardless of what happens at St. Louis, Mr. Giljum, who politically
identifies himself as a communist, has already lost one source of
income because of the controversy over the videotapes. The St.
Louis-based Local 148 of the International Union of Operating
Engineers, for which he had worked as business manager, demanded his
resignation on Wednesday. Mr. Giljum said he is worried that
Southwestern Illinois College, where he teaches a class on labor
relations, will ask for his resignation as well.

The other instructor depicted in the videos is Judith Ancel, director
of the Institute for Labor Studies at the University of Missouri at
Kansas City. The footage used for the videos show her and Mr. Giljum
team-teaching a course titled "Labor, Politics, and Society" through
video conferencing. In a statement issued on Thursday, she said
neither she nor Mr. Giljum ever advocated violence in their classroom
lectures, but they felt compelled to discuss it given the violent
history of the labor movement.

In the statement, Ms. Ancel said she is "outraged at Mr. Breitbart's
invasion of our classroom and his attempts to intimidate us and my
colleagues at the university." She called Mr. Breitbart "a master of
taking quotes out of context, deletion of what doesn't serve his
purpose, and remixing to achieve totally different meaning," and cited
several points in the video where she believes statements by her and
Mr. Giljum were taken out of context or otherwise distorted.

Plan to 'Go After' Educators

If Mr. Breitbart's Web site has broadcast a misleadingly edited video,
it would hardly be the first time. The site is notorious for having
put up the video that purported to show a Department of Agriculture
official, Shirley Sherrod, saying she had discriminated against a
white farmer, when a review of her comments in context show that she
said no such thing. (Ms. Sherrod, who was forced to resign after the
video came out, has sued Mr. Breitbart.)

Mr. Breitbart's Web site also publicized the 2009 hidden-camera videos
of employees of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform
Now, or Acorn, which appear to show the employees advising a pimp and
prostitute on how to deceive the IRS about their activities and
income. Law-enforcement officials who investigated the allegations
have said the videos were edited to make it look as if the employees
were actively engaged in wrongdoing when, in fact, they were not.

Mr. Breitbart had indicated in an April 18 interview on Hannity, Sean
Hannity's show on Fox News, that he planned to "go after" educators
and their union organizers.

Mary Lou Hines Fritts, chief information officer for the Kansas City
campus, said on Thursday that the classroom footage used in the videos
on Mr. Breitbart's site technically could not have been downloaded,
and the videos must have been made by capturing streaming video
through a process commonly known as "ripping."

Wandra B. Green, a spokeswoman for the campus, said, "What we believe
was that an individual who had valid access used a third-party tool to
capture the video, and, after they did that, they modified it for
their personal use, without authorization from UMKC."

Public reaction to the videos has been heated. Web sites associated
with the Tea Party movement in Missouri have been urging activists to
contact university and state officials and demand, among other things,
that the faculty members involved in the course be fired and that the
labor-studies program be suspended. Both Mr. Giljum and Ms. Ancel said
they have been barraged with angry phone calls and letters, and Mr.
Giljum said he has received explicit death threats over the phone.

The American Association of University Professors issued a statement
on Thursday characterizing the videos on the Web site as an assault on
"the academic freedom and employment security of the instructors," and
"the privacy and safe classroom environment of the students, some of
whom speak on the video clip."

"When students voice their views in class, they should not have to
fear that their comments will be spread all over the Internet," the
statement said. "When faculty members rightly explore difficult topics
in class, they should not have to fear for their jobs or their lives."

The statement called on the two campuses and the university system "to
speak out clearly and forcefully in defense of the rights of their
professors and students."

Also see the following:
http://crooksandliars.com/karoli/breitbarted-again-biggovernment-uses-edited.

-- 
Jim DevineĀ / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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