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The Bill Powers Jr. School of How to Win Friends and Influence People. (Dale Carnegie would be ashamed)

Posted by WILLisms

Texas is ground zero in the national higher education reform movement. While the Washington crowd tends to fixate on President Obama’s piddling slap fight with Congressional Republicans over government-secured student loan rates, the real action on fixing higher ed is happening in Austin, Texas. The battle between Rick Perry and the higher ed reformers on one hand versus UT-Austin President Bill Powers and the Ivory Tower status quo on the other hand has been marked by years of grueling and often dull trench warfare that was punctuated last week by a flurry of bombs, beginning with a tuition freeze, followed by rumors of the UT President’s termination, and culminating in a textbook social media public relations campaign that deserves serious examination. And the consequences of this fight? Well, what happens in Texas won’t stay in Texas.

This is the story of “I Stand with Bill Powers,” a remarkably well-executed example of online astro-turfing.

Bill Powers is the President of the University of Texas at Austin. He individually receives an annual income roughly twelve times the median household income of Texas, not counting six figures of deferred compensation or benefits. He commands a robust team of sharp folks internally at UT and has secured the big guns as outside public relations counsel. There is now an ongoing effort– a well-orchestrated social media campaign which appears highly inorganic– to “save” him. Save from what and for what is the difficult part to figure out.

This post aims to 1. provide some context for the UT kerfuffle itself, 2. cast some light on how people and organizations successfully astro-turf social media campaigns, 3. provide reasons why members of the media ought to be a bit more careful in how they report on the online/digital/new media horse race, and 4. offer some thoughts on what comes next.

1. Kerfuffle Context
First, some background on what the heck this “Save Bill Powers” stuff is all about.

There’s the very, very macro context, which is basically that the higher education establishment has become sclerotic and out of touch, tuition has skyrocketed well beyond inflation, and the next major economic shock in America could easily be the higher ed bubble bursting. It’s an iceberg straight ahead and we’re the Titanic, but there’s still time to steer the ship into safer waters. If we don’t, though, yikes.

This is the startling context for this kerfuffle:

college-cost-inflation.gifZooming in a bit further, to Texas, we see that tuition at UT went up 39.88% from Fall 2004 to Fall 2011. We also see a Governor, who happens to be a Texas A&M alumnus (that’s UT’s primary in-state rival, so there’s a built-in suspicion among Longhorns), and who has appointed the entire Board of Regents at The University of Texas system, who has committed to making public higher education in Texas more affordable, accountable, and accessible. Specifically, Governor Perry embraced various specific higher ed reforms over the years, including what are known as the “Seven Breakthrough Solutions” as a starting point for reform. Not surprisingly, the higher ed establishment opposed these reforms. Despite UT-Austin receiving more dollars– and more dollars per student– in state funding from the State of Texas than UC-Berkeley gets from California, it seems like the only acceptable higher ed reform to the higher ed establishment is more money.In the summer of 2011, battle lines were drawn, with the “Texas Coalition for Excellence in Higher Education” (a.k.a. “The Coalition”) emerging out of the Burson-Marsteller P.R. shop to support Bill Powers and the higher ed status quo. In October of 2011, Natalie Butler and Keshav Rajagopolan (current and former Student Body Presidents, respectively) launched a “spin-off” group group called Young Texans for Excellence in Higher Education. Various groups formed on the other side (including “Rock the Ivory Tower“) devoted to affordability and reform.

The Governor also called for a 4-year tuition freeze for incoming college students (in January of 2009) and a $10,000 college degree in 2011. The $10K degree idea was met with scorn and incredulity from the higher ed establishment, but it’s now been adopted in public universities across the state. And the tuition freeze? Well, just this month, the UT Regents approved it for two years (not the four that Perry initially called for). Bill Powers lashed out at the tuition freeze idea online and in an email:

powersemail.gifIf all of this context (and the above context is certainly just the Cliff’s Notes version this story) was the collective geopolitical navigation of the Great Powers in the 1930s, then Paul Burka’s apocalyptic, all-caps Texas Monthly blog post was the bombing of Pearl Harbor:burkablog.png2. How to Astroturf a Social Media Campaign
This is where it gets interesting. While most of the press coverage has focused on the numbers of people who “joined” a Facebook group called “I STAND WITH BILL POWERS,” at least one member of the press has hinted that something else might be afoot here. The Texas Tribune‘s Reeve Hamilton tweeted a note of caution:reevetweet.pngWhile I already suspected that the anonymously sourced, (and still uncorroborated) BurkaBlog post and the apparent organic response to it was all a little too convenient, Reeve Hamilton’s tweet further piqued my interest, so I explored it further. Along with some others in the higher ed movement, it quickly became apparent that a handful of really sharp young folks, working with some powerful organizations with ample resources, synthetically engineered what appeared to be a natural groundswell.Let’s take the url registration, just 100 minutes or so after the nuclear BurkaBlog post went live, the savebillpowers.com domain name had been secured:

urlregistration.png
Okay, that’s been known to happen organically, I guess. People just happen to read an unsubstantiated, rumor-mongering blog post at 7:30 pm on a Wednesday night and just happen to buy a domain name that just happens to become the focal point of a public relations campaign, within an hour and a half. And they just happen to buy the domain name anonymously. It just happen all the time.Meanwhile, the issue positioning, keywords, and instructions went out via Facebook, from Natalie Butler of the “Young Texans”:

instructionsgoout.gifAnd at nearly this precise moment, #saveBillPowers began trending in Austin, Texas:trending.pngAccompanying the Save Bill Powers Twitter presence was an identically-branded Facebook page, formed at 8:10 pm(just 40 minutes after the BurkaBlog post hit the web):whenfbgroupstarted.pngEven with such robust branding, a matching website, matching twitter, implied institutional backing from President Powers himself, and a catchy slogan, the Burson-Marsteller team has only managed to gather mere hundreds of actual fans:savebillpowers.pngIt can be frustrating to oversee such a meager social media presence, but luckily there is a solution. Ditch the Facebook page. Go with a Facebook group!A bit later, two-time Teaching Assistant to Bill Powers Rachel Meyerson founded the “I STAND WITH BILL POWERS” Facebook group:

rachelmeyersonstartsthegroup.pngImmediately after the group was created, Meyerson added two admins to the group:admins.pngAnd they all started adding members to the group.In order to boost its “groups,” Facebook allows individuals to not only invite someone to a group but actually add him or her to it, whether he or she is even interested. Many Facebookers, even young digital natives, aren’t engaged enough to even notice they’ve been added without their permission. And many Facebookers aren’t savvy enough to know how to leave a group after they’ve been “Facejacked.” Some people tend to fear leaving the group and insulting their friends who added them. Needless to say, spam-adding folks en masse to Facebook groups they may or may not agree with is not cool, and it’s definitely not true digital virality in any organic sense. Indeed, this guy showed how easy it is to add all of your Facebook friends to a group in only about 20 seconds.

That’s not a movement. That’s a line of code. And even if you don’t use a javascript code (some browsers have blocked scripts like that since the video was made) and have to manually click on each of your friends to invite them, you can still spend just minutes to add hundreds or even thousands of people. To quickly get 10,000 people in a group, you really only need a half dozen young people (who tend to have a lot of Facebook “friends”) spam-adding their contacts.Pranksters angry about the loss of personal control even began adding Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to NAMBLA (North American Man Boy Love Association) groups in protest. It’s a problem, and it’s bad etiquette at the very least.

Bad etiquette or not, “Facejacking” is how the “I STAND WITH BILL POWERS” group grew and continues to grow. If you go in to the group, click “about,” then click to view members by date added, you can find the screenshots below yourself. Scroll down to the beginning (it’s kind of an annoying process), and you’ll see that nearly everyone was spam-added by just a couple of individuals (these first 120 or so members are in reverse chronological order):

addedsixth.pngaddedfifth.pngaddedfourth.pngaddedthird.png

addedsecond.png

addedinthebeginning.png

See all of those “added” folks? The overwhelming majority: added, not invited. And all by two individuals.

But surely they just seeded it a bit, and it became an organic, sustaining organism of its own shortly thereafter, right? Not really. Yes, others got in on the spam-adding action, but look at a sample from Friday:

addedfriday.pngLots of spam-added folks. Not really much evidence of a true newsworthy movement.Or the 21 most recent additions:

mostrecent.png
Again, out of 21 new members, Callie Williams added 1, Shelah Flowers invited 1, Andrew Grant invited 2, Keshav Rajagopolan added 3, and Rachel Meyerson added 14. Rajagopolan and Meyerson alone spam-added 81% of the newest 21 members. In total, 86% of the newest 21 members were spam-added, while 14% were invited.We’ve established that the response to this kerfuffle was astro-turfed. So what? People astroturf all the time.

Well, it’s one thing to astro-turf, but it’s another thing to actively lie to the press about it.

3. Why More Skepticism is Needed in Reporting on Social Media

Let’s look at Keshav Rajagopolan’s statements to the Houston Chronicle.

Did social media explode with support for Bill Powers? According to the Houston Chronicle, yes:

chronlies.gifExplosions!Some relevant points:

Keshav Rajagopalan, who was UT’s student body president in 2008-2009, said he started the Facebook group last night after Burka’s post was published. He said thousands have asked to be part of the group. He worked with Powers closely during his time as student body president, but thinks that many UT students who did not know him personally recognize him as a leader that cares about them.

Wait. We just saw that Rachel Meyerson started the group, and that nearly all the early members were spam-added by other people. Indeed, Rajagopolan was personally responsible for a great deal of the spam adding. “Thousands have asked to be part of the group” is just plain deceitful.

While the spam-adding continued at a fast and furious pace on the “I STAND WITH BILL POWERS” group, there was no activity overnight and into mid-morning on the “Save Bill Powers” page:

noactivity.png
Again, a page (rather than a group) doesn’t allow you to spam-add. People can be invited, but they can’t be added without their permission.So, the Save Bill Powers page was essentially a ghost town, and essentially the entirety of the social media operation to that point was astro-turfed by a P.R. firm. Jennifer Sarver of said P.R. firm tweeted:

sarver.pngJulie Shussler of the same P.R. firm posted to the group a bit later:shussler.pngMatt Portillo said it was a piece of cake, and, sure enough, he (and Shussler) spam-added members as well:shussler-portillo-meyerson.pngPortillo is also an organizer for the Young Texans, which he calls “a subsidiary of kind of a larger group“:portillo.pngThat subsidiary stuff sounds so organic, doesn’t it?Meanwhile, the media drumbeat about how amazing this spontaneous social media movement has kept pounding.

Many uncritical headlines and stories were all over the web this past week. To give credit where credit is due, though, an Austin American-Statesman story did join the Tribune‘s Reeve Hamilton in noting that something wasn’t quite right with the numbers:

By 5 p.m. Thursday, a Facebook group called “I Stand With Bill Powers” had more than 9,800 members, although some whose names were listed said in subsequent posts that they had been included by friends without their knowledge and against their wishes.

Bottom line: the widely reported “I stand with Bill Powers” Facebook effort was not an organic display of support. It was, however, publicly held out by the organizers as organic.

It’s one thing to astro-turf, as that happens sometimes in the public relations field– it now ought to be clear how easy it is to do that. But it’s another thing to astro-turf and lie and say it was organic, then not only passively allow the media to inaccurately portray it as organic but actively feed that inaccuracy with untrue statements.

As for members of the media, more of them should turn a far more critical eye to claims of social media prowess based on what could very well be pure astro-turf.

4. What’s Next?

Moving forward, the higher ed reform movement will continue, and the status quo guardians will continue as well. The UT faculty this week voted to support their boss, although one professor abstained:

English professor Snehal Shingavi was the only member who abstained from voting at the meeting. Shingavi said it was dangerous for the faculty’s support of Powers to be coupled with tuition increases.“There is an unfortunate narrative in Texas that presents faculty as living off the fat of tuition,” Shingavi said. “It’s important not to connect these two. I abstained from voting because I understood the importance of having a unified vote.”

Meanwhile, the target of most of the negative social media content on the “Save Bill Powers” page(s) and “I STAND WITH BILL POWERS” group, Governor Perry, is not going away quietly on this issue:

“I don’t think it’s any big secret that I’m for keeping the cost of education down, so my suspicion is that no one in Texas thinks that I’m for tuition growth,” Perry said. “It’s a good message to send to the citizens of the state that we’re not going to just have tuition increasing with no regard for what’s happening economically for the citizens of the state.”

And, ultimately, that’s why this “movement” smelled so fishy from the get-go. You’re telling me that students are rallying around the guy who wants to raise their tuition? Yeah, no. It was always a fabricated social media cause via public relations firm. It was well done, no doubt– a great example of why my alma mater pays them so much to do what they do. But it was never a truly viral or organic cause.

As for Bill Powers, can someone please explain to me what exactly are his accomplishments, or, alternatively, what exactly are his goals, ideas, values, or policies that are worthy of support?

UT Professor Rob Koons bravely asks this very question:

Under President Powers, tuition has climbed over 23% in just 4 years (15% over inflation, as measured by the consumer price index). Average net cost per student (taking into account financial aid) has gone up 33% from 2005 to 2009, from $4534 to $6052 (the System stopped reporting this figure in 2010). In the same period, spending on administrative salary has gone up 86% at the university level, 55% in the College of Liberal Art and 45% in the College of Business, to take two typical examples of the Colleges. Spending on faculty salaries have gone up 21% in the same period (13% over inflation), with no increase in student learning, as measured by the Collegiate Learning Assessment (in which UT ranks in the 23rd percentile of its peer group).President Powers’ hand-picked student ‘advisory’ panels (whose discussions and votes have not been released to the public, despite the Open Meeting act) have simply rubber-stamped the views of Powers and his allies. For example, two years ago, after key lawmakers (including Senator Ellis) announced that any increase in tuition above 4% would lead to a reconsideration of tuition deregulation, Powers’ panel miraculously determined that UT “needed” an increase of exactly 3.95%. Amazing coincidence!

Change in rankings:
US News #44 in 2008, #45 in 2012. A drop of one position, paid for by at least a 33% increase in costs to students!

Four-year graduation rate
2005: 46.4%
2008: 47.7

Six-year graduation rate
2005: 74.8
2008: 77.5

Nursing exam pass rate (UT graduates):
04-05: 97.0
2008: 92 (A drop of 5%)

Engineering exam pass rate:
04-05: 90.2
2008: 89

Exactly what are his accomplishments?

More on that dismal learning percentile figure:

On March 14, Washington Post reporter Daniel de Vise, in his piece “Trying to assess learning gives colleges their own test anxiety,” reported that the University of Texas at Austin ranks very low in achievement of student learning. “For learning gains from freshman to senior year,” writes de Vise, “UT ranked in the 23rd percentile among like institutions. In other words, 77 percent of universities with similar students performed better.” The Post obtained this data through a public records request. The standardized test was conducted by the Collegiate Learning Assessment.Prof. Richard Arum, a New York University sociologist, “reviewed UT’s results at the request of the Post.” He found that “seniors have spent four years there, and the scores [on student learning] have not gone up that much.”

Ouch.

Again, what are Bill Powers’ accomplishments? Somehow vastly higher tuition with academic ranking and performance stagnation doesn’t seem like an accomplishment.

That all being said, the faster we can bring this back to a discussion about ideas rather than a quarrel between players, the better. For students. For parents. For alumni. For employers. For taxpayers. For everyone. Right now, the easy fixation is on Rick Perry vs. Bill Powers, but the ideas they are talking about are important. Tuition. Affordability. Accountability. Opportunity. The American Dream. Texas as America’s shining state on a hill.

Do we accept the broken status quo, or do we reform our higher education system in Texas? At stake: far more than parochial Ivory Tower politics.

Will Franklin is a proud graduate of UT-Austin. He also formerly worked for Governor Rick Perry. This post was adapted from an original WILLisms.com post.

 

See article on Red State: http://www.redstate.com/willisms/2012/05/16/how-to-astroturf-an-online-cause-the-story-of-i-stand-with-bill-powers/

By Mary Lee Grant

times of texas online

The University of Texas system is developing a pilot program that would allow students to graduate a year earlier, condensing undergraduate education and medical school courses.

The push for a more efficient degree plan comes in the midst of controversy over efficiency-based higher education reforms backed by Gov. Rick Perry and the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation. Those include calling for a $10,000 four-year degree plan and large enrollment increases at UT.

However, the medical school plan is part of a nationwide trend, the Chronicle reported, and there were no indications that TPPF-backed reforms are related to the new program. Read More

By Darrell Preston andDavid Mildenberg

Under Rick Perry‘s leadership, Texas has registered the largest growth in jobs and population among the 50 states while amassing a deficit estimated at between $15 billion and $27 billion for the next two years.

The population has surged by about 3.9 million since 2000, giving the state four new seats in Congress, the biggest gain for any state, Census Bureau figures show.

Payroll jobs, meanwhile, have grown by more than 1 million while total U.S. employment was little changed, said Richard Froeschle, deputy director of Labor Market and Career Information at the Texas Workforce Commission.

“A lot of the job growth in Texas has occurred in lower-wage industries, which is problematic but also no different than in other states,” Froeschle said.

“People and companies are coming to Texas because of good public policy that includes low taxes,” said Merrill Matthews, a resident scholar at the Institute for Policy Innovation, a conservative research center that advocates for lower taxes and smaller government.

While Perry appears to be testing the presidential waters by traveling to U.S. cities, including Los Angeles on Thursday, and touting Texas’ business-friendly environment, corporate leaders are criticizing a 2012-2013 state budget that cuts higher-education spending while shortchanging primary and secondary schools by $4 billion in the two years that begin in September.

Executives including Ed Whitacre, a former chairman of Dallas-based AT&T, have said cuts of that magnitude may make Texas less competitive. The state ranks 43rd in graduation rates, according to the Legislative Budget Board in Austin.

“For Texas to cut $4 billion from public-school funding now, when a better-educated Texas can be a bulwark against future recessions, seems unwise, not conservative and, in fact, very risky,” Charles Butt, chairman of H.E. Butt Grocery in San Antonio, wrote in a letter published June 10 in the Houston Chronicle.

Public schools have started firing teachers and increasing class sizes, while colleges and universities will receive $1.2 billion less. Lawmakers didn’t raise taxes or dip into the state’s $9 billion Rainy Day fund. Read More

By TODD ACKERMAN

Dr. Ronald DePinho challenged University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center scientists to develop new approaches to cancer treatment Wednesday, the day before his selection as the Houston research hospital’s next president is expected to be finalized.

In his first speech to faculty and staff, DePinho said that if M.D. Anderson wants to remain the world’s leading cancer center, it must invent and put into practice new models of discovery and care. If it continues doing exactly what it’s been doing, he said, the field will pass it by.

“Humanity is counting on us,” said DePinho, a Harvard geneticist. “This is our moment. The battle lines have been drawn.” Read More

By Melissa Ludwig

Gene Powell, a San Antonio businessman who chairs the University of Texas System Board of Regents, would like to reduce tuition by about 50 percent across system institutions, including UTSA, according to an April 7 memo obtained by the San Antonio Express-News and the Houston Chronicle.

Powell also suggests increasing enrollment at UT-Austin by 10 percent per year beginning in 2013, and by an unspecified figure at all other campuses.

Other goals include making UT-Austin the best public university in the nation and creating a timeline for UT’s four emerging research universities, including the University of Texas at San Antonio, to reach Tier One status. Read More

Brooke Brown  Online Education News

Times of Texas Gov. Rick Perry

On February 28 of this year, Austin, Texas governor Rick Perry gave a public speech challenging local universities to create a bachelor’s degree that could be earned by students at the cost of $10,000 or less.

Perry declared that such a cost-effective degree — one that reduces the cost of a Texas education by two-thirds — would be the beginning of a complete makeover of the current state university education model, paying schools based on graduates rather than the current system, which schools based on a tiered system of enrollment. Read More

AUSTIN, Texas –(Business Wire)–

The Texas chapter of FreedomWorks has launched a grassroots effort to support reforms in higher education that the Board of Regents at the University of Texas and Texas A&M are considering that would incorporate transparency in university spending in addition to results-based evaluations of both teachers and students to ensure success.

Specifically, FreedomWorks has designed www.TXHigherEdReform.com toserve as an online petition targeting the Regents of these schools in order to help demonstrate broad support for these common sense reforms. A robust earned media campaign is also helping draw attention to the debate that pits Texas students, parents, and taxpayers against so-called “Edu-crats” at these universities; a ruling elite class of academics who are more interested in perpetuating their own cushy situations than improving education.

Already FreedomWorks Chairman Dick Armey has authored an opinion-editorial that recently ran in the Houston Chronicle, entitled, “Texas Needs Higher Education Reform.” A statewide grassroots letter-to-the-editor program and other activities are also in the works.

FreedomWorks President Matt Kibbe commented, “Free-market education reform must remain a foremost priority for conservative, limited government advocates. Texas has a great opportunity to help lead the nation in higher education reform, paving the way for other states to follow suit. Just as FreedomWorks is backing traditional ‘school choice’ reforms for primary and secondary education in various states around the country, the debate in Texas is extremely important to the broader movement.”

By Weston Hicks http://www.agendawisereports.com

The Houston Chronicle wrote a story on the coming higher education reform, and the teeth-gnashing it has caused among the timid and entrenched.

The story had a quote from a Professor that captures the sentiment felt by honest people worried about the task forces that are assigned to audit UT Austin’s teaching results, research results, and money-spending habits. This group is to be distinguished from dishonest people in the UT establishment who are afraid accountability and transparency will ruin their sweetheart deal.

Houston Chronicle quoted a professor named James Aldridge at UT-Pan American in Edinburg. “[The task forces] could come up with some really helpful information, or they could be some sort of assault team. The atmosphere is such that I don’t know,” Aldridge said.

This quote couldn’t be more explanatory. It draws on the two elements giving shape to the UT higher ed controversy:

1) The task forces are just examining operations - The honest people concerned about the audit recognize, at some level, that all that’s happening is an examination into how things work.  That’s why Aldridge admits the task forces could potentially come up with some “really helpful information.” The entrenched interests attempting to scare everyone into an anti-Regents frenzy won’t make admissions like Aldridge’s because their goal is maintenance of the status quo. They pretend that the Regents have detailed, devious plans for UT and that the task force is only for show. A statement like Aldridge’s, however, puts the lie to pretensions the Regents already know what they’re going to do and somehow lack respect for intellectual rigor and research. They could come up with some “really helpful information.” Yes they could. This leads to the second element.

2)      The UT establishment-created atmosphere of fear mongering – Aldridge mentioned that the task force ”could be some sort of assault team.” This is an honest statement that reflects the scare tactics engaged in by the entrenched UT establishment who don’t want the party to stop.  Lack of accountability is always harmful, yet it’s rampant in UT’s operations. The “please don’t examine what we do” crowd has propagated myths ranging from “they want to turn UT Austin into the University of Phoenix” to “they want to defund all research” to who-knows-what-else. In truth, the Regents want better research, better teaching, and to maximixe tuition and tax dollars, and the UT establishment knows it. They’re deceptively trying to generate fear that the university will be ruined, when it’s only their sweetheart deals that are in danger. UT Austin, like every other person or group, can only improve with the introduction of accountability and transparency.

The UT establishment is fear mongering with reckless disregard for the truth in order to create a massive public relations obstacle for the Regents and their audit of operations. For their plans to work, Texans need to be as timid and gullible as the UT establishment is currently treating them. If Texas history is any guide, odds are against the UT establishment.

See story @ http://www.agendawisereports.com/2011/04/professor-quote-captures-higher-ed-controversy/