A student of mine went to conference, then got an email from unknown journal. The student asked me if this was normal and whether the journal was legit. Here’s the process I went through to evaluate the journal and try to help the student.
I googled the journal title. First thing I noticed was the domain name. The publisher's name is not a correctly spelled English word, which either means the publisher is trying to be gimmicky or using a non-English spelling. Neither makes a good first impression.
The sidebar lists journal information, and I see “Year first Published: 2019”. So even if this is a legitimate journal, it has no track record and probably no reputation. And journals are all about reputation.
Nor does the journal info sidebar say anything about the journal being indexed anywhere, like Web of Knowledge or Scopus. Most aspiring legitimate journals at least mention indexing, whether they currently have it, because most authors want their work to be findable in academic searches.
The second paragraph of the journal description has a glaringly obvious typo about the type of research the journal publishes (“-olog” instead of “-ology”). This suggests that someone is not paying attention to the home page. This could be because they are a fly-by-night operation that is only interested in charging authors, or that they’re new or inexperienced and can’t be bothered to proofread.
So this looks like either a scam (likely) or something made by careless amateurs. Neither’s good.
27 November 2019
Accreditation agency lies to support ICE sting operation on foreign students
Accreditation of universities means that they self police and peer review each other to ensure there is a certain level of quality assurance. That they are real educational institutions that are not going to vanish.
I am in shock to learn that one accreditation agency was complicit in a terrible hoax.
The Detroit Free Press is reporting that the US government, via Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), created a fake university, the University of Farmington.
There is a lot going on in this story, and it’s not clear to me who this “sting” was intended to target. The story mentions “recruiters” have been charged, but their role is not clear.
But I am sort of stunned by the arguments the officials running it are making:
But another part of the story says:
So it’s not as though this fake “university” was just a website.
In any case, I am kind of against the whole “They should have known” argument when this fake university was listed as accredited. This is supposed to be the whole point of accreditation: to protect people from scams. Accreditation should protect people from profiteering scams and government entrapment scams.
The accreditation agency that participated in this should be ready to answer a lot of questions. I think this was extremely problematic behaviour on the part of the accrediting agency. It calls into question every other accreditation decision. If a government can warp the accreditation process for a sting, what other ways can “accreditation” be had?
External links
ICE arrests 90 more students at fake university in Michigan
I am in shock to learn that one accreditation agency was complicit in a terrible hoax.
The Detroit Free Press is reporting that the US government, via Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), created a fake university, the University of Farmington.
Attorneys for the students arrested said they were unfairly trapped by the U.S. government since the Department of Homeland Security had said on its website that the university was legitimate. An accreditation agency that was working with the U.S. on its sting operation also listed the university as legitimate.
There is a lot going on in this story, and it’s not clear to me who this “sting” was intended to target. The story mentions “recruiters” have been charged, but their role is not clear.
But I am sort of stunned by the arguments the officials running it are making:
Attorneys for ICE and the Department of Justice maintain that the students should have known it was not a legitimate university because it did not have classes in a physical location. ...
“Their true intent could not be clearer,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Brandon Helms wrote in a sentencing memo this month for Rampeesa, one of the eight recruiters, of the hundreds of students enrolled. “While ‘enrolled’ at the University, one hundred percent of the foreign citizen students never spent a single second in a classroom. If it were truly about obtaining an education, the University would not have been able to attract anyone, because it had no teachers, classes, or educational services.”
But another part of the story says:
The school was located on Northwestern Highway near 13 Mile Road in Farmington Hills and staffed with undercover agents posing as university officials.
So it’s not as though this fake “university” was just a website.
In any case, I am kind of against the whole “They should have known” argument when this fake university was listed as accredited. This is supposed to be the whole point of accreditation: to protect people from scams. Accreditation should protect people from profiteering scams and government entrapment scams.
The accreditation agency that participated in this should be ready to answer a lot of questions. I think this was extremely problematic behaviour on the part of the accrediting agency. It calls into question every other accreditation decision. If a government can warp the accreditation process for a sting, what other ways can “accreditation” be had?
External links
ICE arrests 90 more students at fake university in Michigan
16 November 2019
The crackpot index, biology edition
Amanda Glaze wrote:
Challenge accepted!
The likelihood of someone making revolutionary changes in biology:
The Crackpot Index
Can someone with some free time create a crackpot index for biology like the one that exists in physics?
At the very top of that index there needs to be a section for making arguments that foundational research in a field is completely wrong and using a clip art PowerPoint displaying your own theory based on no research whatsoever as a viable alternative.
Challenge accepted!
The likelihood of someone making revolutionary changes in biology:
- A -5 point starting credit.
- One point for every statement that already addressed in TalkOrigins.
- Two points for every exclamation point!
- Three points for each word in ALL CAPS.
- Five points for saying that “theories” are less likely to be true than “laws” or “facts.”
- Five points for every mention of “entropy” or “Second law of thermodynamics.”
- Ten points for each use of the words “Darwinism” or “Darwinist.”
- Ten points for arguing a discredited individual should be taken seriously because they were “nominated for a Nobel prize.”
- Ten points for saying that “Scientists are the ones who aren’t following the evidence.”
- Ten points for arguing that historically documented events are “statistically impossible.”
- Ten points for saying a current well-established theory is “only a theory.”
- Ten points for calling the current theory “a theory in crisis.”
- Ten points for asserting that evidence only counts if personally witnessed, in real time, by a human being.
- Twenty points for saying that then things that current theories predict should not happen are huge problems for the theory because nobody has seen them happen.
- Twenty points for listing people - whether they have any training or experience in the field in question - who “dissent” from current ideas.
- Twenty points for finishing any claim or argument with the word, “Checkmate!”
- Twenty points for saying, “Darwin was wrong.”
- Twenty points for every other scientific discipline that must be wrong in order for your claims to be correct.
- Twenty points for asking, “Then why are there still monkeys?”
- Thirty points for asking, “Where are the transitional fossils?”
- Thirty points for suggesting that scientists on the brink of death recanted their ideas.
- Thirty points for calling any scientist an “industry shill.”
- Thirty points for claiming any scientist holds a view “just to keep the grant money coming.”
- Forty points for taking quotes of a famous scientist out of context so that it appears to support your position (“quote mining”).
- Fifty points for claiming that your views are being suppressed while writing on a social media platform, blog, or website that is not only discoverable, but lands on the first page of search engine results.
The Crackpot Index