AP walks back reporting on Harvard plagiarism scandal after backlash


Summary

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Full story

In journalism, the Associated Press and the AP Stylebook are used to determine proper terminology and standards in reporting. Media conglomerates also partner with the AP to share their work. The AP, however, edited a recent headline and report, admitting they were incorrect and saying their story “didn’t meet their own standards.”

The original version of the article was titled “Harvard president’s resignation highlights new conservative weapon against colleges: plagiarism,” referencing the resignation of Harvard President Dr. Claudine Gay.

https://twitter.com/JerylBier/status/1742604353800716784

The headline, along with some of the sentences within the article’s body, have since been edited after the AP received backlash over calling “plagiarism” a “new conservative weapon.”

The new headline removes the word “weapon,” but keeps the premise that a “conservative attack” helped to fan “outrage” over alleged plagiarism in Gay’s scholarly work.

Harvard’s former President Claudine Gay resigned following Congressional testimony about antisemitism on the campus and plagiarism accusations related to Gay’s scholarship.

A conservative news outlet, The Washington Free Beacon, was the first to report dozens of “long stretches” in Gay’s published works that duplicated other works. A Harvard committee confirmed the accusations.

Users on X, formerly Twitter, took issue with the way AP characterized the president’s resignation and capitalized on a conservative effort to have her removed.

https://twitter.com/AP/status/1742455903264129474

A “Community Note” label was added to AP’s post on X sharing the article, allowing users to offer context to the post. Readers added context, saying:

  • “Plagiarism is a breach of rules for Harvard University.”
  • “There were a ‘series of breaches.’”
  • Plagiarism “cannot be considered a weapon.”


“They buried the lede,” a Washington Post columnist said. “The GOP stole this weapon from colleges, which for years punished people for plagiarism with little to no input from conservatives.”

https://twitter.com/ScottJenningsKY/status/1742505923677987180?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1742505923677987180%7Ctwgr%5Ec37e4c34224c3256fbe875bcae53c66fd3657e0e%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.foxnews.com%2Fmedia%2Fassociated-press-calls-plagiarism-new-conservative-weapon-harvard-president-scandal

“It’s remarkable that conservatives with, with all the pouncing and seizing they do, had the time to invent the concept of plagiarism over the last couple of months,” CNN Political Commentator Scott Jennings posted on X.

Portions in the body of the article were changed in an attempt to remove bias.

The Associated Press highlighted a conservative activist’s post on X that used the phrase “scalped” referring to Gay’s removal, saying the user was acting “as if Gay was a trophy of violence, invoking a gruesome practice taken up by white colonists who sought to eradicate Native Americans.”

The AP later added in context that it wasn’t only used by white colonists.

In recent years, Stanford University and the University of South Carolina changed leadership due to plagiarism allegations. According to the AP’s report, this leadership change is different, as Claudine Gay was Harvard’s first Black president.

In the article, the AP cited Walter Kimbrough — a former president at a historically Black college — who said, “As a Black person in academia, you always have to be twice, three times as good.”

The Associated Press still sets the standard for journalists across the country. According to AllSides, which provides media bias ratings for over 1,400 media outlets, Associated Press reporting displays left-leaning bias.

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Why this story matters

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Parturient bibendum

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Diverging views

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History lesson

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Bias comparison

  • The Left placerat montes risus erat habitasse interdum libero sed a tellus, taciti ullamcorper blandit ac curae facilisi eget eleifend.
  • The Center donec et quisque lobortis etiam id facilisis praesent risus nullam nec fringilla platea congue vestibulum conubia velit, tempus pellentesque parturient nibh eu efficitur nostra gravida quis turpis ultricies consequat nunc diam.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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7 total sources

Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

  • Quam eu habitasse primis donec risus dolor congue consectetur quis diam feugiat praesent parturient dui, augue consequat semper magnis tempor magna penatibus lorem sed aliquam senectus vehicula.
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Key points from the Right

  • Nisl justo nullam fusce mauris varius velit dictumst, vivamus sollicitudin luctus maximus primis mattis, habitant imperdiet sodales vulputate ultrices nostra.
  • Dapibus luctus leo nunc platea gravida elementum sed eu non eros himenaeos mus quis, suscipit sociosqu euismod tellus urna nisl fermentum dictumst hendrerit per bibendum sodales.

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Summary

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Semper quam

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Full story

In journalism, the Associated Press and the AP Stylebook are used to determine proper terminology and standards in reporting. Media conglomerates also partner with the AP to share their work. The AP, however, edited a recent headline and report, admitting they were incorrect and saying their story “didn’t meet their own standards.”

The original version of the article was titled “Harvard president’s resignation highlights new conservative weapon against colleges: plagiarism,” referencing the resignation of Harvard President Dr. Claudine Gay.

https://twitter.com/JerylBier/status/1742604353800716784

The headline, along with some of the sentences within the article’s body, have since been edited after the AP received backlash over calling “plagiarism” a “new conservative weapon.”

The new headline removes the word “weapon,” but keeps the premise that a “conservative attack” helped to fan “outrage” over alleged plagiarism in Gay’s scholarly work.

Harvard’s former President Claudine Gay resigned following Congressional testimony about antisemitism on the campus and plagiarism accusations related to Gay’s scholarship.

A conservative news outlet, The Washington Free Beacon, was the first to report dozens of “long stretches” in Gay’s published works that duplicated other works. A Harvard committee confirmed the accusations.

Users on X, formerly Twitter, took issue with the way AP characterized the president’s resignation and capitalized on a conservative effort to have her removed.

https://twitter.com/AP/status/1742455903264129474

A “Community Note” label was added to AP’s post on X sharing the article, allowing users to offer context to the post. Readers added context, saying:

  • “Plagiarism is a breach of rules for Harvard University.”
  • “There were a ‘series of breaches.’”
  • Plagiarism “cannot be considered a weapon.”


“They buried the lede,” a Washington Post columnist said. “The GOP stole this weapon from colleges, which for years punished people for plagiarism with little to no input from conservatives.”

https://twitter.com/ScottJenningsKY/status/1742505923677987180?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1742505923677987180%7Ctwgr%5Ec37e4c34224c3256fbe875bcae53c66fd3657e0e%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.foxnews.com%2Fmedia%2Fassociated-press-calls-plagiarism-new-conservative-weapon-harvard-president-scandal

“It’s remarkable that conservatives with, with all the pouncing and seizing they do, had the time to invent the concept of plagiarism over the last couple of months,” CNN Political Commentator Scott Jennings posted on X.

Portions in the body of the article were changed in an attempt to remove bias.

The Associated Press highlighted a conservative activist’s post on X that used the phrase “scalped” referring to Gay’s removal, saying the user was acting “as if Gay was a trophy of violence, invoking a gruesome practice taken up by white colonists who sought to eradicate Native Americans.”

The AP later added in context that it wasn’t only used by white colonists.

In recent years, Stanford University and the University of South Carolina changed leadership due to plagiarism allegations. According to the AP’s report, this leadership change is different, as Claudine Gay was Harvard’s first Black president.

In the article, the AP cited Walter Kimbrough — a former president at a historically Black college — who said, “As a Black person in academia, you always have to be twice, three times as good.”

The Associated Press still sets the standard for journalists across the country. According to AllSides, which provides media bias ratings for over 1,400 media outlets, Associated Press reporting displays left-leaning bias.

Tags: , , , ,

Why this story matters

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Ex at

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Turpis scelerisque

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 198 media outlets

Diverging views

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Underreported

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Bias comparison

  • The Left montes odio non consequat nunc justo id parturient auctor dictum, senectus ac velit fermentum porta pellentesque class pharetra.
  • The Center gravida hendrerit tellus sem donec inceptos consectetur suspendisse non magna facilisi himenaeos platea aenean rutrum augue facilisis, urna malesuada cras leo ullamcorper torquent cubilia maecenas ipsum erat lorem commodo felis neque.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

7 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Taciti molestie imperdiet velit orci porta sagittis dolor scelerisque aptent consequat venenatis ipsum nascetur habitasse, felis praesent per arcu conubia lacinia quam phasellus tempor fringilla dui lectus mus.

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  • No coverage from Far Left sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Left sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Lean Left sources 0 sources

Key points from the Center

  • Faucibus ullamcorper nunc ultricies gravida non volutpat aenean sagittis ipsum neque elementum suspendisse cras blandit, molestie commodo primis dignissim mus purus risus lobortis parturient porttitor nec fusce.
  • Sociosqu auctor adipiscing platea lacinia habitasse lacus nulla netus nisi viverra sollicitudin interdum odio condimentum urna egestas, nisl dictumst fusce tortor sem hendrerit vestibulum eleifend malesuada molestie rhoncus mauris augue ligula.

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Key points from the Right

  • Quam lacinia magna potenti aliquet ultrices facilisis arcu, vivamus ante elit eget ultricies conubia, et etiam tincidunt venenatis congue cubilia.
  • Sed elit maximus felis platea maecenas vehicula parturient ullamcorper mi nisl vestibulum finibus ipsum, laoreet dictumst nullam dictum fringilla quam turpis arcu mollis habitasse taciti tincidunt.

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