|
| JUSTIN CHEN/YH
|
|
|
Versity BluesBy Justin Chen
This weekend, the Internet-based Versity.com removed all notes for
Yale courses from its website. The decision to take down the notes
came shortly after Dean Richard Brodhead's, BR '68, GRD '72, announcement
last week, emailed to all undergraduates, that Yale's Vice President
and General Counsel had made a written demand that Versity.com
"cease posting notes from Yale courses on its website and remove any
notes that had previously been posted."
According to Janet Cardinell, Director of Campus Relations at
Versity.com, the notes were removed because Versity.com still
"wanted the opportunity to talk with the Dean's office." She
explained, "We were contacted by the Administration. We took the
notes down for the whole campus as a courtesy to the Administration
so we could open up the dialogue-it was a gesture of goodwill." She
further maintained, "We think this is a great opportunity to work
with [the Yale Administration], and we're looking forward to the
opportunity. What we want to do is cooperate."
Initial Ad-versity
Cardinell stated that Versity.com has been trying to contact Dean
Brodhead's office since December to ask for permission to begin its
operations at Yale. "We sent e-mail, voice mail, and letters, but
never received a response," said Cardinell. The company decided to
begin on-campus marketing during January despite the lack of
communication with the Dean's office. Cardinell explained, "We
usually get student note-takers first, which helps identify which
classes we're going to be working with."
Lydia Monroy, PC '00, Versity.com's Yale Campus Operations
Manager, noted that students seemed very receptive to the company's
presence. "People jumped on it quickly," Monroy said. "We already
had note-takers for 37 classes in a couple of weeks even though we
hadn't hit it that hard." In fact, the response to Versity.com's
marketing campaign was so positive that, according to Monroy, a
total of approximately 100 students applied for the position of
note-taker. After the company had stopped hiring, 24 total students
had been accepted as note-takers, several of whom were supplying
notes for multiple classes. A seven-person "marketing team" managed
all of Versity's on-campus presence.
Nor was the enthusiasm for Versity.com confined to students in it
for the money. According to Monroy, "after less than two weeks
approximately 15 percent" of the total undergraduate body was
registered on Versity.com's site. By Cardinell's estimate, up until
the notes were removed, "seventeen percent of all students had
registered, and were using notes on the site." She added, "The
students really value those notes."
In the body of Brodhead's email, which was sent out last Friday,
the Dean stated, "There is a consensus that Versity.com's actions
are a deeply troubling commercial intrusion into our classrooms, an
improper exploitation of the intellectual property of the
instructors, and in many instances a misrepresentation of courses."
In response to the commercial aspect of Brodhead's concerns,
Cardinell stated, "The question then is, 'Is typing up notes running
a business?'" Monroy agreed, arguing, "For many students, taking
notes for Versity is like a job." She later stated, "Are we saying
that student can't have job here at Yale? How about the people who
make Yale shirts and sell them on campus? Or students in frats who
put up signs, and are also representing commercial interests."
Yale Professors take a stand
Professor Robert Sternberg, who teaches an Introductory
Psychology course, would tend to disagree with Cardinell and
Monroy's assessment of the situation. He stated, "This whole
enterprise seems wrong to me. It is basically a profit-making idea
in the guise of helping students." Sternberg teaches one of the more
than 50 courses for which Versity.com was still seeking student
note-takers before the notes were abruptly taken offline.
Sternberg, who says that he only discovered that Versity.com was
targeting his course through "a letter from the Provost's office,"
would tend to agree with Brodhead's claim that the notes on
Versity.com are "in many instances a misrepresentation of courses."
He noted, "Much of what I do is spontaneous. I don't think you get
the same value from online notes." Class lectures are especially
important in Sternberg's Psychology class because "they constitute
about 50 percent of the tests."
In response to Sternberg's comments, Monroy maintained that
Versity's notes were "always meant to be a study aid, and never
meant to replace a classroom experience." Monroy was also quick to
dismiss comparisons of the notes on Versity.com to transcripts of
the lectures, stating, "The notes are not word for word. Our
note-takers are asked to organize the materials by subject, and to
only put up what they think is important." A note-taker hired by
Versity.com, who wished to remain anonymous, agreed, saying, "I
don't think students will use it as an excuse, and it won't make
that much of a difference in terms of who skips class. If people are
paying 30 thousand dollars for a school, they'll want to go to
class."
Even in classes for which lectures are not necessarily the most
important aspect of a student's approach to learning of the
material, however, Professors still find Versity's practices
unnecessary. Professor Jonathan Spence, SY '61, GRD '65, whose
popular "History of Modern China" class consistently is filled above
official capacity, discovered three weeks ago from one of his TAs
that lecture notes for his class were being offered online through
Versity.com's site.
Spence was not very concerned with the prospect that online notes
would allow students to miss lectures. "The importance of the
lecture depends on the student. Some students don't take any notes
at all, and others take them down at a feverish speed, and that's up
to the student." He later added, "In a sense, lectures are voluntary
anyway." He also commented that if a student wants to miss every
lecture and to pay someone else to take the notes every day, it
isn't up to the professor to interfere.
Spence's main concern was with the inability of the professor to
play a role in the process. Although he did not wish to comment on
the quality of the notes that he read, he stated that his main
concern is that "professors should be asked about their notes, and
they should be able to make their own summaries and put them on the
web." He was also concerned that online notes do not provide the
proper context for understanding a lecture, stating, "In my
lectures, I talk around and at the reading."
Versity.com maintains that professors can still exercise control
over the note posting process. According to Cardinell, a web-based
"communication package" called IZIO allows professors to communicate
with students, and it "only takes about a half hour to set up a
whole website for a course." Through Versity.com's system,
professors can post a course's syllabus, handouts, and assignments,
all on a password-protected site. Students can sign on with a
password and see the information provided by the professor, get
assignments, see their grades, and so on. There is also a separate
ability for the professor and the note-taker to exchange documents.
The professor can first read through the notes and provide feedback
to the note-taker, who is then responsible for correct the notes to
be posted.
As for the students...
On the whole, students remained enthusiastic about Versity.com's
services. David Moss, BR '01, discovered online notes for his Music
145 class, "Jazz: America's Music" when Versity representatives
passed out printouts of the web-based notes of the previous day's
lecture last week. This strategy, according to Monroy, was only
tested in six classes before the controversy erupted last Friday.
Because a test was coming up later that same week, Moss decided to
give the site a try. He commented of the notes, "They were complete
and accurate," adding, "For the most part I used them to complement
my own notes." Although Moss stated that he "could see it for some
people as being a substitute for class, which could be a problem,"
he also commented that "Just as a student, and all legal issues
aside, I'm in favor of [Versity.com's services]." The popularity of
notes for that particular class is well documented; according to
Monroy, over 100 students in Jazz and American Music used the notes.
The anonymous note-taker also praised Versity's value. "I think
that it's a really good service, and I thought it was a great
resource for students and something I wanted to get involved in,"
said the note-taker, who is posting notes for both John Merriman's
History 202 class and George Hall/William Nordhaus' Economics 116
class. She stated that all note-takers hired by Versity.com have
already been "paid for all notes they put up so far," but they
"can't post notes until [the Administration] figures things out."
Yale's reaction
Last week, Vice President and General Counsel Dorothy Robinson
sent a letter to Versity.com, demanding that the company remove its
online lecture notes for the Yale campus. As Cardinell stated,
Versity.com complied with Robinson's demand to avoid controversy and
to facilitate discussion between the two sides. Dean Brodhead's
email alerted the student body to the Administration's official
stand on the issue but gave little indication of how Yale would
proceed with Versity.com.
There are mixed feelings about how the Yale administration
reacted to the controversy, but in general, students and professors
are satisfied with Yale's approach to a potentially tricky
situation. Spence said, "Yale reacted very sensibly and swiftly."
Monroy also vouched for the university, saying, "I understand where
the pressure is coming from, and Versity should have asked for
permission first." She added, though, "I think it's unfortunate that
it is happening right now because of midterms. Many students were
planning on using Versity.com's notes for their midterms but didn't
get a chance to print them out before they were taken down."
Supporters of the online notes were also accepting of the
university's response. Moss stated, "The issue in question should be
resolved by legal means, and it's time that Yale asserted itself."
Moss also wondered, however, why "this university should be
different from any other," stating that if online note sharing is
unethical, it should be outlawed everywhere and not just here at
Yale.
The anonymous note-taker stated, "It doesn't surprise me that
Yale was unhappy about [the notes]. Maybe a permission-based system
would have been the way to go from the beginning." But she also
added in defense of her employers, "Versity hadn't had these
problems with other campuses, and it basically just wanted to get
its foot in the door first."
A unique problem?
Cardinell claimed that at "no other universities" has she had the
same types of problems as she is having at Yale, further stating
that in most cases school administrations are "very willing to
respond." Versity's success with many other highly competitive
schools around the nation is a testament to its ability to create
compromises with academic policies at various educational
institutions. Stanford, the
University of Pennsylvania, Caltech, Duke, and Cornell are among the schools
featured on Versity.com's site.
In several instances, Versity.com worked with university
administrators to create a solution with which the professors could
be satisfied. According to Cardinell, permission-based systems were
implemented at Stanford, the University of Vermont, and the
University of Michigan, such that only those professors who wished
to participate in the online notes process would do so. Furthermore,
Versity.com was able to make the notes at Stanford viewable only by
students of that school, eliminating the concern that the
professors' lectures would be open to scrutiny by just anyone with
web access.
Although Cardinell maintained that Harvard's notes were taken
down sometime this academic year due to "resource difficulties," the
Crimson was actually faced with struggles similar to those now
confronting Yale, and the two schools' administrations have
evidenced similar reactions. Whereas Yale's Undergraduate
Regulations for 1999-2000, as quoted by Dean Brodhead in his email,
state that "no undergraduate may undertake to represent any
commercial interest or to operate any business on the campus without
securing prior permission from the dean of student affairs,"
Harvard's Handbook for Students is even more explicit, stating,
"Students who sell lecture or reading notes, papers or
translations...are similarly liable [to disciplinary action] and may
be required to withdraw. In an October 21st article
in The Harvard Independent News, ("Point, Click, Cheat" by Judy S.
Kwok), Harvard College Dean Harry Lewis is quoted as saying,
"[Selling notes] is a very serious offense," adding, "The College
expects students to live by its rules." Lewis was unavailable for
comment for this article.
Hope for the future?
Although it has bowed out of visibility at Yale for the moment,
Versity.com looks forward to cementing relations with the
Administration before too long. "We're really looking forward to the
opportunity to work with them, getting a product that both sides
support in favor of the students," Cardinell said. "Versity started
with online lecture notes, but we have a broader vision for the
company. We're not just lecture notes; we're an online program that
supports online student learning-we have the knowledge center,
practice exams, and question and answer groups, all for students to
really get involved in academic pursuits. It's a broader issue than
just lecture notes."
Cardinell also stated that plans for a compromise system similar
to the one at Stanford could also be implemented here at Yale. She
stated, "The concern that professors at Yale seem to have is that
they're fearful that their information will be shared with others
around the world-there are ways to address those concerns." However,
until Versity.com manages to contact the Dean's office, no efforts
can be made to provide a compromise strategy. "We're going to work
with the Administration to figure out the best approach to develop a
program that everyone can support. We offer permission-based
programs at other campuses and they're working well-but I couldn't
tell you now if the [Yale administrators] are going to accept."
Meanwhile, Yale is confronted with the reality that students
actually made use of Versity.com's services, and that there might be
a real need on the Yale campus for an online note-sharing system.
Monroy agrees, but insists that Versity.com could still play an
important role in the development of such a system. "It would be a
great idea if the university had its own internal [note-sharing
service], but through Versity.com there could be a way to restrict
access to notes only to Yale students." She added, "We want to work
with the professors to open their minds. They are passionate about
their work and their ideas, and they should be, but hopefully we can
help them to understand what a great service this is. It benefits
students, helps learning, and we are hoping the professors will
agree."
Both Sternberg and Spence disagree with the concept of online
lecture notes in any form. Sternberg stated, "I don't think it is a
good idea. Much of the value of a class is in being there. It is not
all canned stuff. Students don't really get the whole value of a
class with on-line notes." Spence's concern was that "there is no
sense in formalizing the process." Acknowledging that missing
classes now and then is inevitable, he said, "We need to treat
students as grownups and let them handle the course themselves. If
someone misses a class because she's sick, or has a game, or a stage
production, she can get the notes herself on a one-on-one basis."
The anonymous note-taker, however, still maintains that online
notes are essential to Yale's progress as an educational
institution. "I'd be really disappointed if the university couldn't
work something out with the company because it's a really good
resource. Versity is willing to come up with a system that will work
for everyone." She warned, "Education will be revolutionized by the
Internet, and if Yale doesn't jump on the bandwagon now it'll be
sorry in the long run."
Lola Ogunkoya contributed to this article
Back
to YH Features...
|