UManitoba–PhD ‘diploma mill’


Prof suspended after taking university to court over waiving academic requirements for doctoral student

feature photo

Earlier this month Gabor Lukacs received two letters from University of Manitoba president David Barnard. One invited the assistant professor of mathematics to a dinner in acknowledgement of his teaching excellence award. The other informed him that he was being suspended without pay.

Lukacs is accused of violating the university’s privacy regulations with respect to the identity of a PhD student who had been asked to withdraw from the program after twice failing a comprehensive exam. The student later successfully appealed that decision to the Dean of Graduate Studies, John Doering, who, in fall 2009, waived the requirement that the student take the exam at all. The student is said to suffer from “extreme exam anxiety.”

For all of our coverage of this story, please click here.

After months of attempting to use university channels to have Doering’s decision reversed, Lukacs filed an application in late September at Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench. The application calls for Doering’s decision to be quashed and for an affirmation that the dean had no authority to resolve the issue without consulting an appeal committee of academics. Lukacs alleges that Doering violated Faculty of Graduate Studies regulations and the University of Manitoba Act.

Although the student’s identity was included in Lukacs original court application, at a hearing Thursday morning a judge ordered a publication ban on the name.

When outlining the reasons for Lukacs’ suspension, Barnard cites the court application directly in his letter, a copy of which has been obtained by Maclean’s. “These documents include unauthorized reference to a student’s personal and personal health information,” Barnard wrote. The university president calls Lukacs “insubordinate” and further accuses him of “having engaged in a pattern of behaviour with regard to [the] student which the university considers to be harassment.”

Several people contacted for this story, including Dean Doering and certain professors in the Department of Mathematics, either declined to speak to the matter, did not respond to a request to be interviewed, or redirected Maclean’s to the university’s Director of Public Affairs, John Danakas. Danakas declined to speak to the specifics of the case, citing “personnel” and “privacy” issues, but agreed to address university policy in general terms.

In a written response, Danakas stated that all university employees are bound by the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, and the Personal Health Information Act. “In general personal information about a student, with or without the name attached, may only be disclosed to other university employees who absolutely need to know the information for the purposes of performing other duties,” he wrote.

As for the powers of the dean, Danakas stated that “It is university practice to attempt to resolve appeals at the lowest possible level. This could include a dean achieving an informal resolution with a student after a broad consultation.”

Lukacs, who says he did not meet the student in person until he served the student with court papers, says he is motivated by a desire to protect academic standards. “I have a personal interest in protecting the integrity of the PhD program in Mathematics, because it affects my reputation whether I am a member of a respectable department or a diploma-mill,” he stated via email.

When asked to respond to allegations that he violated the student’s privacy, Lukacs defended himself: “The right for privacy cannot trump the need for review of decisions made without jurisdiction, or decisions that are patently unreasonable.”

According to emails and other documents included with an affidavit filed by Lukacs, the dispute began in March 2009 when the student failed for the second time a comprehensive exam in analysis. Under regulations outlined by the Faculty of Graduate Studies the student was required to withdraw from the PhD program.

In July, after an unsuccessful appeal to an associate dean, the student appealed the withdrawal to Dean Doering on the basis of suffering from “extreme exam anxiety.” Doering reinstated the student and requested that the Graduate Studies Committee in the Department of Mathematics devise an alternate examination option.

The committee, after consulting with disability services, agreed to allow the student to retake the exam with more time and relaxed conditions.

In late August 2009, Doering rejected that proposal and requested that the student be given an oral exam. When the graduate studies committee did not agree to those terms, Doering waived the exam requirement altogether.

Lukacs first became involved with the case in October 2009, after he was elected to replace a member of the graduate studies committee who had resigned, allegedly in protest of the dean’s decision.



7 Responses to “UManitoba–PhD ‘diploma mill’”

  1. name(required) says:

    Good for you, Lukacs. Too often now we’re compromising standards for the sake of keeping students in programs, even when they don’t belong there.

  2. chuckling in thr corner says:

    It takes only a bit of browsing through the list of events held at U of M to find all the names.

    You will see plenty of multicultural “tensions” over there. Having been in the “industry”, I can make an educated guess that racial discrimination threats were raised behind the doors, putting Doering between a rock and hard place.

    I think he is still better off graduating the guy and being sued by own prof, then having human rights commission smelling blood.

  3. sam wight says:

    It seems spelling requirements were wa(i)ved in the headline.

  4. lmao says:

    t/y sam …

  5. CW says:

    Thank Christ someone at the U of M has academic integrity. That place is the biggest cash grab I’ve ever seen. So many students can’t speak or write English to save their lives. Money is everything to lots of people there and many professors will take on any grad/PhD students who drop by (some need special consideration since their GPAs are under 3.0) only so they can have a reason to keep the same grant funding they had the previous year.

    Kudos to Lukacs for actually doing what a scientist should…

  6. Cynical Prof says:

    Besides the obvious people to blame, I’ll add some for Lukacs’ colleagues. He’s an assistant professor, so likely untenured. This makes him incredibly vulnerable. Since apparently a large number of his colleagues agree with him, someone tenured, preferably with full professor status (thus no worries about promotion being denied) should have taken the lead on this.

  7. [...] http://oncampus.macleans.ca/education/2010/10/28/umanitoba-phd-diploma-mill/ Nationalpost: Campus torn in dispute over PhD University of Manitoba professor Gabor Lukacs has been suspended for three months without pay after he took legal action to overturn the university’s decision to award a PhD to a student who hadn’t met all the requirements [...]