On his way out?
Concern is being expressed about the future of Martin Hall, the vice-chancellor of the University of Salford, after renewed controversy over the closing of language courses and another round of job cuts at the institution.
However, our Head of Linguistics, Dr Hannah Tenet, insists that she can find no hard evidence of any intention to resign.
She said that she had carefully studied the vice-chancellorās reported response to a question about his ability to lead Salford forward. This contained just 18 words: āIām positive about being here, because otherwise IĢżwouldnāt be here. Iāve got other places IĢżcould be.ā
Dr Tenet agreed that there was āa hint of tentativenessā about the assertion by Professor Hall that he wouldnāt be at Salford unless he was āpositiveā about being there. It was, after all, semantically possible to be positive about being somewhere ā John Doe is positive that he is in Basingstoke ā without necessarily regarding that positivity as evidence of an actual wish to be there.
Āé¶¹
However, Dr Tenet agreed that rather more serious concerns about Professor Hallās continuing commitment to Salford were raised by his assertion āIāve got other places I could beā.
This type of assertion, known in linguistics as the Yah-Boo phenomenon, is, according to Dr Tenet, frequently associated with serious doubts about oneās current situation. It has ādefinite linguistic affinities with the adolescent cri deĢżcoeur āNobody asked me if IĢżwanted to be bornā, and the more mature expression of dissatisfaction with circumstances: āSod this for a game of toy soldiers.āā
Āé¶¹
Dr Tenet told our reporter that she had no intention of indulging in further speculation as this might, in her considered linguistic opinion, ābe tantamount to intruding on private griefā.
Ģż
Poppleton don indicted
One of our leading scholars, DrĢżPiercemüller of the Department of Media and Cultural Studies, has been indicted on the new Romanian website integru.org, which invites academics and non-academics to flag up research work that shows evidence of academic misconduct.
According to the site, DrĢżPiercemüller is accused of the following breaches of ethical research behaviour:
- Twelve of the research articles he published between 2011 and 2013 in completely different journals have more or less identical content despite dramatic differences in title.
- The first of these 12 articles was extensively plagiarised from an earlier article written by one of DrĢżPiercemüllerās seriously underpaid research students, and all subsequent articles plagiarised this initial plagiarism.
- All 12 articles extensively cited each other in such a way as to maximise Dr Piercemüllerās citation count.
- All 12 articles inflated the validity of their conclusions by using such dubious statistical formulations as āmore or less trueā, āpretty significantā, āthere or thereaboutsā and āmuch the same thingā.
- All 12 articles referred to the āimpactā that would be made by the reported research even though there was no evidence that any of the pieces had been read by anyone other than the complainants.
- In the most serious complaint, a departmental secretary, described on the site simply as āMaureenā, suggested that Dr Piercemüller could not be the actual author of any of the papers attributed to him because she had good grounds for believing him to be an entirely fictional character.
Ģż
Thought for the week
(contributed by Jennifer Doubleday, Head of Personal Development)
Āé¶¹
Classes for Graduation Day Presenters will begin this Thursday. After last yearās unfortunate debacle in which 143 accountancy graduands whose surnames began with H failed to be called to the platform, our first session will concentrate on mastering the first third of the alphabet.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?
