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UST’s Corona defense turns into absurd attack on journalism

By

SAN  FRANCISCO—At the end of the day, how  Chief Justice Renato Corona got his doctorate degree is a minor issue compared to the serious accusations he faces.

And as a private academic institution in the Philippines, the University of Santo Tomas could certainly make — and change — its rules on who should get to claim to have earned a doctorate degree.

But in a perplexing twist, UST’s defense of Corona’s degree turned into an absurd attack on journalism. More specifically, online journalism.

That’s the fast growing segment of media which has, over the past 2O years, revolutionized the way news is reported and shared.  Every major news organization in the world uses it. And the Web has spawned new, dynamic news organizations on the Web, including some in the Philippines.

But UST  doesn’t get it.

Which is surprising – and unfortunate.

After all, UST is known for producing some of the country’s best writers and journalists, including my late professor and mentor Roger Sikat and my friend Glenda Gloria, one of the editors of Newsbreak and the new online news site Rappler.

Glenda  Gloria is also a colleague of Marites Vitug (also a friend), one of the country’s best investigative journalists who has done an incredible job reporting on the Philippine Supreme Court.  The Gloria-Vitug duo also produced the most authoritative account of the Mindanao conflict with their book “Under the Crescent Moon.”

But to UST, these are all irrelevant.

The university with supposedly one of the best communications programs in the Philippines argued that it did not respond to Vitug’s request for information on Corona’s UST career because it  didn’t know how to respond to “online journalism.”

“Does anyone claiming to be an online journalist given the same attention as one coming from the mainstream press?” UST said in a statement, as quoted in the Philippine Daily Inquirer. “We understand that while Miss Vitug used to be a print journalist, she’s part of an online magazine, Newsbreak, which has reportedly been subsumed into ‘www.rappler.com.’ What’s that?

“Is that a legitimate news organization? What individuals and entities fund Newsbreak and Rappler? Do these outfits have editors? Who challenged Miss Vitug’s article before it went online so as to establish its accuracy, objectivity and fairness? Why was there no prior disclosure made? What gate-keeping measures does online journalism practice?”

Huh?

UST could have simply responded with a clear-cut denial or defense:  “Ms. Vitug was wrong — here’s the dissertation” or “Based on our evaluation of all his accomplishments, Mr. Corona deserved a doctorate degree.”

Instead, the people running the university exposed themselves to be profoundly clueless on how media has changed.

As veteran journalist Inday Espina-Varona said in a Facebook post, “For the management of a university with a top-ranked college of communications to say, it’s at a loss re how to respond to online journalism is truly mind-boggling.”

It’s not as if UST is unaware of the World Wide Web. It has a Web site, and even a Facebook account.

But perhaps it’s still a strange world for the old guard on campus.

I found myself imagining UST’s guardians reading Vitug’s piece on printed copies of the Inquirer, gripping with indignation the newsprint that left ink stains on their fingers. Meanwhile, across the campus or at Internet cafes on España, their students are reading the same story on PCs or smart phones.

But there’s a bright side to this. UST just gave us an opportunity to talk about this brave new world of media. It’s still evolving after all.

Rappler is just another example of the change. It’s new and exciting, and led by experienced journalists, including chief executive Maria Ressa.

They’re just getting started. They have their work cut out for them. Success is not guaranteed.

I myself am not too crazy about the name which sounds like a hip-hop chat room. (“Rappler” is from the words “rap,” to discuss, and “ripple,” to make waves, the group’s Web site says.)

But that’s a minor quibble.

As Ressa writes, “We feel unbelievably lucky to be at this time and place — to feel the ground shifting beneath our feet and see the world change in ways we can barely imagine.”

Maybe some of that shifting and shaking will eventually be felt even in the most cloistered offices on one famous campus on España.

On Twitter @KuwentoPimentel. On Facebook at www.facebook.com/benjamin.pimentel

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Tags: journalism , Media Ethics , Online Journalism , Renato Corona , University of Sto. Tomas , UST

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  • Anonymous

    Sadly, journalist today at almost always paid hack for some politician and their services are for sale to the highest bidder. Black propaganda, anyone?

  • Anonymous

    UST Graduate Program Tarnished Itself?

    UST may have the power to confer a doctorate on anyone it considers deserving. But it’s quite possible it may have “abused” that power in the case of Corona and some
    other graduates.

    Secretiveness, arguments based mainly on prerogative and executive
    privilege suggest strongly that a prerogative has been injudiciously
    used.

    More investigative work may unearth these inconvenient truths:

    1.
    The UST Graduate Program in many cases may have been a diploma mill of
    doctorates for VIPs. The implied come-on to candidates: “How to Obtain a
    Ph D. from UST Without Really Trying”.

    2. Corona’s paper/speech may well be rated objectively as mediocre
    or sophomoric. It could have been done by a ghostwriter, a cut-and-paste
    job,
    possibly plagiarized.

    3. So Corona will try to keep his speech/paper and SALN Top Secret in the interest of personal (not national) security.

    4. Moreover, ….(to follow)

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_S3ZBTU3EN637VONESYPQGI5IKM Angelito

    Naku baka sabihin na naman ni Mirriam Santiago na ” The only thing that goes for UST is its longevity”. Aray.

  • Anonymous

    Speaking of hypocrites, instead  of blaming an irresoponsible journalist like Maritess Vitug, this columnist is now blaming a venerable institution like that of UST for not trusting cheap journalism.

    There are now too many paid writers, who for the sake of money, are writing defamatory articles, without the benefit of counterchecking and fairness. They use online journalist to do away with editors and verification.

    These are sign of the times, typical of the hypocrite Aquino legions.

    • Anonymous

      I have high respect for Ms. Vitug for her fearless articles- she can even be an institution by herself and you accuse her of being irresponsible! It is people like you who are so irresponsible because you defend cheats and plunderers and that makes you, paocabre, a low-life unworthy to be called human!

  • Anonymous

    Ms. Maritess Vitug and Ms. Maria Ressa are more credible than those people at UST who awarded Corona with honors for being honorable is the last thing you can describe a justice of the SC receiving a prohibited chief justice appointment from a fake and plundering president.

  • http://pinoy-politics.blogspot.com Monsi Serrano

    UST should have been more prudent in conferring the Doctorate degree to Corona. They should have realized that any move that done by and for Corona will be inevitably scrutinized.  Perhaps, UST would also like to play politics by subtly backing Corona through this half-baked conferment of Doctorate. In doing so (and by not becoming prudent), UST has now become the subject of taunts and jeers.Given this scenario, who’s to be blamed for this? It’s UST! They could have hold in abeyance the conferment to the “Koronang Tinik”. But in their desire to look good and to give a subtle signal to the Senate prosecutors that this is our man, they are now in hot water. Prudence is one of the Cardinal virtues that should be present amongst the Dominican friars or the Damasos of the modern time. By the way, you may Google “Koronang Tinik” and know more about Corona.On the issue of online journalism or media, UST is trying to muddle the issue. Whether Miss Vitug is a print or an online journalist, that’s totally immaterial. The fact remains that Miss Vitug is a journalist. Gone are the days that print media will be the trend. New York Times, cut their jobs way back 2009 to shift from print media to digital media (with lesser page in their printed newspaper), same goes with Washington Post, USA Today, Toronto Star and other publications. It looks like UST Public Relations and Media department are not aware of this emerging media trend. Now, I would say you have really been founded in 1611. An old school at that, both literally and figuratively. And it shows on the way you responded to a question from an online journalist. Aren’t you aware that before, there were only tri-media —- print, radio and TV? Now there’s a new media or QUAD media, including internet or online publication. You’re outdated and you must fire your Public Relations & Media Department because there is no difference between a response to print or online media, because they’re the same thrust using different media, the other is print, while the other is online. How can you response effectively in the new changing world of media if you have a weak team and a lame excuse handling a crisis like that?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_N3ZKJV2ECXECXRXLXP5S4O7ANU Jerick

    How can the questions raised by UST be absurd and to the extreme viewed as an attack? It’s normal to know the other party who’s alleging something, it’s to know whether or not things should be investigated or even be considered.

    I also don’t get it why the writer don’t get why some of the heads of UST don’t know how to respond to the world wide web. Alot from the past generation are not as computer literate compare to us. The graduate school is managed by different people vs the college of arts and letters (Writers and journalist, not sure ^_^). UST is divided in several departments or faculty. such as: college of commerce, college of accountancy, college of law, and probably 13 or more other departments which are mange by different dean and staffs. Each department will have their own fields of expertise.

    It was careless to assume the people you call old guards know everything, since the other departments produces good writers. and more careless to say that the “UST do not get it”, since UST’s representative was clueless, the populace is generalized.

    Its also sad that the whole university is viewed as a criminal while, as i said UST has a number of different departments which we can consider having independence to manage their own students. if the PHD department had really violated their own rules, ascribing the sin to the whole university is unfair to the other departments or faculties who work with integrity.

    Sorry, but i feel that this article lacks some understanding and research on the organizational structure of UST.

    SIR MONSI SERRANO, as for a Public Relations & Media Department, i’m not sure if ust has one, i think each faculties or departments manage their own affair.With some professors sits as head for some work, like academics. some old folks might not know how to use the net but i don’t think that it’s enough justification to discriminate them to handle external affairs. speaking to the public does not require knowing how to use the internet.



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