Harvard admits more instances of 'duplicative language' found in President Gay's work
Harvard admitted it has found more instances of "duplicative language" in President Claudine Gay’s academic work on Wednesday, as the House also expanded its probe into the Ivy League school, demanding to know whether students and the university’s leader were held to the same standards on plagiarism.
Gay was first thrust into the light due to her refusal to state that calling for the genocide of Jews would conflict with Harvard's policies against bullying and harassment. The Harvard Corporation, the university’s highest governing body, released a summary of a review Wednesday evening saying Gay will request three corrections from Harvard’s Office of the Provost regarding her 1997 Ph.D. dissertation, The Harvard Crimson reported.
Through additional review, Harvard said it found two additional instances of "duplicative language without appropriate attribution."
This comes more than a week after the Harvard Corporation said that while "an independent review by distinguished political scientists" of Gay’s work found "no violation of Harvard’s standards for research misconduct," the university president would be "proactively requesting four corrections in two articles to insert citations and quotation marks that were omitted from the original publications." Last week, Gay submitted corrections to the two articles published in 2001 and 2017, but Wednesday’s additional findings regarding her 1997 dissertation deliver an embarrassing blow to the prestigious university.
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