Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Storm Chelsea v. Storm Skylar

As Storm Skylar pounds New England, the Storm Durham story is slowly beginning to bleed into traditional media. She appeared on "Mornings on the Mall" on WMAL Radio in Washington, DC. She was also interviewed by the Roanoke Times on Monday. Durham says she is working with attorneys supplied by the Virginia Citizens Defense League, and has started a FreeStartr funding campaign. As of this morning, the fund has raised $181.

Monday, March 12, 2018

Updating an old blog

Jaclyn LaPlaca Ricords works as a Learning Consultant for d'Vinci International, a company that purports to assist teachers improve their performance.

Years before Jaclyn worked for d'Vinci, she worked for Marywood University as a history professor. Her story is below:

As I've indicated before, I don't talk about my workplace too often, but this is a sad story.

Last year was my first year at Marywood. During the fall semester, the group of new faculty would go out from time to time. One of those new faculty was a new history professor, Jaclyn LaPlaca. She had previously taught at Kent State-Stark, and had her master's and doctorate from Oxford.

Jaclyn really was doing well at Marywood. Students loved her. She accompanied students to Guatemala for a service-learning trip. She had begun a major oral history project of Scranton-area World War II veterans, getting their recollections on video, and having a public presentation of their remembrances.

Unfortunately, Jaclyn won't be back at Marywood this year. Turns out, according to the principal (provost) at Oxford, LaPlaca was never granted a doctoral-level degree and her master's-level degree was revoked when she was found guilty of plagiarism. Because of the plagiarism, Oxford expelled LaPlaca.

How Jaclyn was able to get the job at Kent State-Stark is a bit murky. Oxford provides certificates, not transcripts, of graduate work. Apparently, Jaclyn included a copy of her Doctorate of Philosophy certificate from Oxford, their equivalent of a doctorate degree, when she accepted the position at Kent State. When she applied, she said she had defended her thesis and was waiting for faculty approval. Instead, Oxford had asked Jaclyn to return the certificate they had given her before she was expelled, but she had not. It is unclear how she had such a document in the first place.

Just as Jaclyn was leaving Kent State-Stark, someone at the Stark campus had anonymously contacted Oxford questioning her degree completion, Frances Lannon, the principal at Oxford, contacted Gayle Ormiston, Kent State's associate provost for faculty affairs, in August 2005 to inform him that Jaclyn did not have any graduate degrees from Oxford. Ormiston did not take any action against Jaclyn, or even inform Marywood at the time. The story broke in the Kent State newspaper, the Daily Kent Stater, about six weeks ago. Normally, no one would notice a student newspaper during the summer, but Kent State's is online. Shortly afterwards, even Marywood students were submitting comments about Jaclyn's story to the Daily Kent Stater website (welcome to the Internet Age!). Once the story became that public, Jaclyn's fate was sealed.

I want to shout at her, "What were you thinking? Did you really think you could get away with it? How fair is it that you had a tenure track job in a field where many with legitimate credentials are having to teach adjunct at two-three schools just to make ends meet?"

Then again, what else was she to do? She either kept up the ruse or gave up her career. She was desperate.

The softie in me wishes there was some way to keep her -- reduce her in rank to instructor, take her off the tenure track, cut her salary, etc. Of course, that's impossible. It would be a terrible message to students -- both the fabrication of her credentials and the plagiarism.

It's too bad that someone who had so much promise finds her career in tatters.
This weekend, a woman by the name of Chelsea Durham, who also goes by the name of "Storm" Durham, claimed on Facebook and Twitter that on Friday she had been fired from her city of Roanoke (VA) Department of Social Services job for merely having a concealed carry permit.

The story sounds a bit thin as there is only Ms. Durham's word for it, but that didn't stop the right wing echo chamber from riding the story hard. First the Daily Caller, then The Inquisitr, The Blaze and Breitbart all covered the story. Failed right wing GOP Senate candidate, Chris Stewart, also stepped in, boosting Ms. Durham's story from his Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Ms. Durham has a fair sense of how to use social media, as she has been active on Twitter, and has had at least two Facebook Live airings. During her Sunday airing, she said she would be appearing on "Fox and Friends" early this week, and on Dana Loesch's NRATV show on Tuesday afternoon. Durham indicated that Alex Jones' show, "Infowars," would also be covering the story.

The City of Roanoke issued a statement on Saturday indicating that there was very little that they could say publicly about Ms. Durham because her departure was a personnel matter. The City did say, however, that Ms. Durham's departure had nothing to do with her constitutional rights.

It has been interesting to hear the sound of crickets from both the local and national mainstream media regarding this story. Perhaps part of that has to do with some of the pushback on Facebook from those who know of Ms. Durham's work history, which, if true, can best be described as worrisome.

It will be interesting to see how this story ultimately plays out. Are the mainstream media purposely not covering the story because, as some right wing critics have suggested, is because it doesn't fit their "anti-gun" narrative? Or has Ms. Durham dug herself a hole in which her only strategy is to dig further?

As Rachel Maddow says -- watch this space.