Showing posts with label Tina Rosenberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tina Rosenberg. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

NY Times columnists still financially benefitting from Bill Gates largesse -without acknowledgement from the Times


8/27/21: I've updated this with more recommendation for what Solutions Journalism should do to avoid these conflicts of interest in the future.

Timothy Schwab has written a series of must-read pieces about the overriding influence of the Gates Foundation on public policy, and how the Foundation influences the reporting of the issues they are involved in, in part by helping to bankroll the media .

His latest analysis, published in Columbia Journalism Review, recounts how in 2016, I emailed the NY Times twice to ask why several “Fixes” columns written by their reporters Tina Rosenberg and David Bornstein hyping various Gates Foundation education projects and investments had no acknowledgements that they themselves received salaries from the non-profit they co-founded called Solutions Journalism Network, which is heavily subsidized by the Foundation.  

My second email to the Times, quoted by Schwab, pointed out how “Having a NYT columnist who is funded by Gates who regularly hypes controversial Gates-funded projects without any disclosure of conflict of interest could be compared to running columns on the environment by someone who runs an organization funded by Exxon/Mobil.”

Yet I received no response of any kind. The 2016 blog post that I linked to in my emails pointed out how the columns by Rosenberg and Bornstein on Gates grantees were biased, with few if any quotes from critics, nor any mention of readily available studies showing that the Gates-funded programs they were promoting had been shown to be ineffective or had a negative impact on educational quality.  

The Gates Foundation provides millions of dollars to many journalistic enterprises, which Schwab argued in an earlier 2020 piece helps to explain the kid glove treatment the Foundation has received over the last twenty years. The media outlets that get funding from Gates and regularly cover his education projects and investments include Chalkbeat, Hechinger Report, The 74, and Education Post, as well as K12 school reporting by NPR, Seattle Times, and others.  The Foundation also helps to fund the Education Writers Association, which frequently features speakers friendly to various policies favored by Gates.

Gates' support of Solutions Journalism Network started in 2011, when Bornstein and Rosenberg  won a $100,000 Gates Foundation “challenge” competition  to build the first Wiki-style platform that packages solutions-journalism (specifically NYTimes Fixes columns) into mini-case-studies for educators around the world to embed in, and across, the curriculum,” in collaboration with Marquette University. 

In 2012, Tom Paulson, a former Seattle Times reporter with called Humanosphere questioned this arrangement.  As explained by a colleague, “Paulson’s fear was that Solutions Journalism was just a fancy way to disguise the desire (by donors, NGOs and others) for success stories, for promoting particular products or agendas.”

In response, Bornstein insisted to Paulson that neither he nor Rosenberg had received any financial benefit from this grant, as “NY Times prohibits them from accepting grant money (for work done at NYTimes) and they are unpaid collaborators with Marquette, allowing them to repurpose their columns and to help them think through the process."

Yet whatever reservations the NY Times may have had about allowing them to receive money from Gates seems to have quickly disappeared. In 2013, Bornstein and Rosenberg incorporated Solutions Journalism Network (SJN), and the next year, the organization received $600,000 from the Gates Foundation, from which they paid themselves  salaries of $75,000 each.  At the same time, they continued their regular "Fixes" columns for the NY Times/

The SJN 990 for that year reports that Bornstein worked 55 hours per week for the organization as its Chair, Treasurer and CEO, and Rosenberg 40 hours a week as its Vice President, which one would think left them little time to work as  NY Times reporters, though together they published at least twelve NY Times “Fixes” columns that year.

Since that time, the organization has raised $7.3 million in total from Gates Foundation.  Their most recent Gates grant was $1.7 million in August 2020, and Bornstein and Rosenberg now receive six-figure salaries from the organization, according to its latest 990.  

In an  August 2020 piece, Tim Schwab noted that he found at least 15  NY Times columns where  Bornstein or Rosenberg had written about  Bill and Melinda Gates, the Gates Foundation, or Gates-funded organizations, without any mention they were being paid on the side by the Foundation through SJN.  He recounted how he contacted Bornstein, Rosenberg, and their NYT editors, to inquire why there were no conflict-of- interest disclosures attached to these pieces.  

Tina Rosenberg responded that We do disclose our relationship with SJN in every column, and SJN’s funders are listed on our website. But you are correct that when we write about projects that get Gates funding, we should specifically say that SJN receives Gates funding as well…Our policy going forward with the NY Times will be clearer and will ensure disclosures.”

Though Bornstein and Rosenberg told Schwab they had asked their editors at the Times to add disclosures to their columns, their editors apparently felt less reason to do so.

Months went by without any such acknowledgements, and when Schwab asked the Times why nothing had happened,   Marc Charney, a senior editor at the Times, said he wasn’t sure if or when the paper would add the disclosures, citing technical difficulties and other newsroom priorities.”

Technical difficulties to update the Times website?  Really?

Tina Rosenberg also told Schwab that there were six columns that related to Gates-connected projects that in her mind did not need any disclosure, including her 2016 profile of Bridge International Academies, as “Bill Gates personally helps fund the project”  and “ SJN’s ties are to the Gates Foundation, not to Bill Gates himself, so no disclosure is needed.”

Bridge International is a for-profit chain of private schools in India and Africa, run by two Harvard graduates. Rosenberg praised the chain in a column in May 2013 and again in June 2016.  I have previously written how their schools feature shoddy facilities, a scripted curriculum, large classes, uncertified teachers, and tuition that is relatively expensive, especially considering the income levels in the developing countries in which they are located. 

Rosenberg’s second column, published in June 14, 2016,  came at an opportune time for the company – when the Liberian government was considering whether to hire BIA to run many of its public schools.  It also closely followed news that BIA had asked the Uganda government to arrest an independent journalist on trumped up charges who was investigating the quality of their schools .  This incident was covered extensively in the media including in the Washington Post just eight days before Rosenberg published her piece in the NY Times, though she left it out of her laudatory column. 

Absent from Rosenberg’s second piece was also any mention of the January 2016 letter by Kishore Singh, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Education  to the Liberian president, stating that if the government  outsourced its educational system to a for-profit company, the country would be committing a “gross violation” of its education obligations under the Sustainable Development Goal number four, which holds that by 2030, the nation would “ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes.”

However, Rosenberg did make sure to add that among several reasons that the Liberian government should go ahead with their plans to hire BIA, she argued, was that the company had garnered substantial  financial resources from investors who included “Bill Gates (personally), Khosla Ventures, the Omidyar Network, the Zuckerberg Education Venture and Learn Capital, which counts Pearson as a limited partner.” 

Her subsequent claim to Schwab that her favorable reporting on BIA did not involve a conflict of interest because she was receiving funding from the Gates Foundation rather than Bill Gates himself is bizarre, in my view.

As  Bill Gates’ personal investments in companies are largely secret it would be difficult to assess what other columns these two may have written that might have benefitted his business interests.  The Gates Foundation also uses several pass through organizations such as New Profit, the New Schools Venture Fund, the Silicon Valley Education Foundation,  and the New Venture Fund to support their favored educational enterprises, without disclosing where the funding is actually going. Together these organizations have received an astonishing $553 million from Gates since 2007.

Contrary to the editors' apparent laissez faire attitude to Rosenberg, Bornstein, and SJN, Schwab relates how this past July, the NY Times had suspended a sports reporter when it was revealed that she was co-authoring a book with former Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps while covering Phelps for the paper. And after BuzzFeed News reported in March that NY Times columnist David Brooks had received a salary from the Aspen Institute, the Times added disclosures to six of his columns  about the work of the Institute, and made him resign his paid position with the Institute.  

After that occurred, Tim once more went back to the NY Times, to ask them why they hadn’t at the very least added any disclosures to the columns by Bornstein and Rosenberg that hyped Gates grantees:

I contacted Kathleen Kingsbury, the editor of the opinion section. I had previously contacted Kingsbury in 2019 and got no response. Kingsbury told me that the Times was finally adding belated financial disclosures to Bornstein and Rosenberg’s previously published columns. She noted in March that new disclosures had been appended to four columns, and the Times was working through a technical hurdle to correct two additional columns.

Again, the notion that “technical hurdles” prevented them to adding disclosures to their website is literally incredible.  

In March 2021, the NY Times did add a disclosure to a 2018 Bornstein column that praised the online program, PowerMyLearning, which has received $11.3M from the Gates Foundation.  The column now ends with the following note:

Editors’ Notes: March 18, 2021

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funds some of the work profiled in this article. The foundation is also one of the funders of the Solutions Journalism Network, which employs Mr. Bornstein. The story selection process for Fixes is independent and is not influenced by S.J.N. funding

But strangely, there is no such disclosure on  another column Bornstein wrote about PowerMyLearning in 2012, even though the company had received $5M from the Gates Foundation the year before. 

Nor are there any disclosures on two different columns by Tina Rosenberg in 2013, both in support of “flipped classrooms,” in which students are assigned to watch instructional videos at home and then spend class time doing problem solving.

Rosenberg’s second column focused specifically on the videos of the Khan Academy, which received $5.5 million from the Gates Foundation in 2010 & 2011. “Flipped classrooms” at the time was Bill Gates’ favorite education reform; in the same year, he gave a speech calling it the “biggest untold story of education technology”.  

Moreover, there is still no acknowledgement of any kind in a 2015 Rosenberg column praising the online/hybrid math program called School of One, now run by a company called New Classrooms and first developed in New York City schools,  even though the company had raised $11 million from the Gates Foundation by that point.  Nor is there any mention in her column of several published research studies showing that its program had yielded null or negative results.

Yet even so, mere disclosures should not be enough.  No journalist who has a regular column in the NY Times should be allowed to report on the investments of either Bill Gates or his Foundation, while continuing to benefit financially from his wealth. This should be true for the other billionaire venture philanthropists who help finance Solutions Journalism as well, including Chan Zuckerberg, Laurene Powell Jobs, and others. 

Another red flag is how even as the organization has expanded, its reliance on a very few donors has appeared to worsen over time.  According to Solutions Journalism’ audited financial statements, in 2017, 55% of their grant revenue was provided by three donors.  By 2019, one donor was responsible for  53% of their grants. Who this donor is remains a secret.

If Solutions Journalism reporters are going to continue hyping the projects of their funders, to avoid the appearance and reality of conflicts of interest in the future as much as possible, they should do the following: 

1- Disclose how much funding they receive from each of their donors on their website.

2- When writing about the investments or favorite policies of their donors, disclose this within the text of their columns, and explain why this does not represent an insuperable conflict of interest.  

3- Make sure that they include in their reporting any of the contradictory pieces of evidence that exist which suggest that these policies or companies do not work as well as their promoters/investors claim.

4-Write up a guide to other journalists, including those they train, on how to avoid such conflicts of interest in the future, or at the least, maintain maximum transparency by disclosing them in the text of their articles and ensure that their reporting is as clear-headed and bias-free as possible.

In any case, it is quite astonishing that the NY Times has continued to refuse to address the conflicted issues of Bornstein’s and Rosenberg’s columns, given how they so quickly made David Brooks resign his position at the Aspen Institute.  Indeed, their  own published  ethical standards  say the following:  

"… it is essential that we preserve a professional detachment, free of any whiff of bias. …Staff members may not accept gifts, tickets, discounts, reimbursements or other inducements from any individuals or organizations covered by The Times or likely to be covered by The Times. …staff members may not accept employment or compensation of any sort from individuals or organizations who figure or are likely to figure in coverage they provide, edit, package or supervise….”

Solutions Journalism also needs to adhere to its own principles –especially as it is engaged in “training”  reporters throughout the country in how to write about social and educational policies in a credible and objective fashion.  As I pointed out in 2016, the following claim is posted on their website:

The Solutions Journalism Network is a nonpartisan organization committed to transparency and editorial independence. We do not support or advocate for any particular idea, model, organization, or agenda….

We believe that it would be a disservice to society to exclude critical reporting on social innovations funded by these sources. On the other hand, it is critically important that such relationships not conflict with the principles of independent journalism. ..We require that our grant recipients remain completely transparent about any potential conflicts of interest that could arise in the context of reporting on an issue of interest to a Solutions Journalism Network funder. 

A separate page on their website, called Ethics code,  proclaims:  Journalists should… Avoid conflicts of interest, real or perceived. Disclose unavoidable conflicts. 

Independent, transparent, unbiased reporting is especially important in this time of growing skepticism towards the mainstream media and attacks on reporters as purveying “fake news.” As Lita Tirak, “Knowledge Curator” of Solutions Journalism proclaimed in a recent blog post, “Trust between the public and the news media is an indispensable part of a healthy democracy”. 

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

The continuing influence of the Gates Foundation on mainstream media reporting and the NY Times in particular

Reporter Tim Schwab just had a must-read piece in the Columbia Journalism Review about how the Gates Foundation provides grants to news outlets such as NPR, BBC, NBC, Al Jazeera, ProPublica, National Journal, The Guardian, Univision, Medium, the Financial Times, The Atlantic, the Texas Tribune, Gannett, Washington Monthly, Le Monde, the Seattle Times, and many others.  These outlets frequently provide favorable coverage of the Foundation and its grantees, and potential conflicts of interest are too rarely admitted by these outlets. 

He tells a particularly disturbing story about how two freelance journalists, Robert Fortner and Alex Park, investigated Gates' outsize influence on international public health policy in 2017 for the Dutch publication De Correspondent and in the HuffPost.  In both instances, the Foundation contacted their editors to try to steer them away from doing stories on this issue and hinted at a financial support if they did.  As Schwab writes:

During Park and Fortner’s investigation for De Correspondent, the head of Gates’s polio communications team, Rachel Lonsdale, made an unusual offer to the duo’s editor, writing, “We typically like to have a phone conversation with the editor of a publication employing freelancers we are engaging with, both to fully understand how we can help you with the specific project and to form a longer term relationship that could transcend the freelance assignment.”

When asked about this, the Foundation sent the following statement to CJR:

“As with many organizations, the foundation has an in-house media relations team that cultivates relationships with journalists and editors in order to serve as a resource for information gathering and to help facilitate thorough and accurate coverage of our issues.’ ”

One of the media organizations Schwab discusses, Solutions Journalism, has received $7.6 million from the Gates Foundation since 2014 to write articles suggesting practical solutions to social problems and train other reporters to do so as well.  Since then, as Schwab points out, SJ has repeatedly produced stories praising projects and companies that are Foundation grantees and/or have received personal investments from Bill Gates himself.   

Solutions Journalism was founded by David Bornstein and Tina Rosenberg in 2013 and they continue to run the organization and receive six figure salaries as CEO and VP for Innovation respectively. They explain their mission this way:

Our mission is to spread the practice of solutions journalism: rigorous reporting on responses to social problems. We seek to rebalance the news, so that every day people are exposed to stories that help them understand problems and challenges, and stories that show potential ways to respond.”

Bornstein and Rosenberg also have a regular column in the NY Times called "Fixes", which according to Schwab has run at least 15 favorable stories promoting the work of the Gates Foundation by name, without any mention that the columnists are funded by the Foundation as well. 

I previously wrote about two pieces Tina Rosenberg wrote for the NY Times,  one in May 2013 and again in June 2016, praising Bridge International Academies, a for-profit company based in Cambridge Mass. that operates a controversial chain of private schools in Africa and India.  By most accounts, BIA schools feature shoddy facilities, a scripted curriculum, large classes, uncertified teachers, and tuition that is relatively expensive, especially considering the income levels in the developing countries in which they are located.  And as has been widely noted, Bill Gates has personally invested in this company.

In her 2016 article about BIA, Rosenberg omitted any mention that the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Education had recently sent a letter to the Liberian president, stating that its plan to outsource some of its public schools to this for-profit company represented a “gross violation” of its education obligations under the Sustainable Development Goal number four, which holds that by 2030, the nation would “ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes.”  The  United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child had also opposed the expansion of these privately-run schools. 

Nor did Rosenberg mention an event that had been reported in the Washington Post on June 9  and Canadian news on June 11,  just days before:  that when Education International, an NGO, sent Curtis Riep, a Canadian academic, to Uganda to investigate the conditions in BIA schools, Bridge had placed a ‘wanted ad’ in a Ugandan newspaper, falsely accusing Riep of ‘illegally’ impersonating one of its employees.  This caused him to be briefly arrested before all charges were dropped. Subsequently, it was revealed that Bridge also had plans to use the personal data of its students to market products to families, as criticized by the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

Rosenberg also authored a NY Times column in March 2015, praising New Classrooms, a much-hyped company that was spun off from a program in the NYC public schools, where it was called “School of One.”  This blended learning math program has received more than $31 million from the Gates Foundation since 2011, and features students receiving lessons and assessments from a computerized "playlist". Bill Gates has repeatedly praised the value of this program, most recently in April 2016 in a speech in which he called New Classrooms a model that “represents the future not only of math, but a number of subjects.”

While Rosenberg quoted from the sole favorable study that supported this program, a December 2014 research study by Doug Ready of Columbia, she left out this disclaimer in the study:

It is important to stress again that these findings cannot be attributed to TTO [Teach to One, another name for the program] without the use of experimental or quasi-experimental designs. In other words, we cannot state definitively that TTO caused the above-average achievement gains noted above.” 

Just months later,  a more authoritative 2015 study was released– a randomized experimental evaluation by Jonah Rockoff of Columbia, that concluded that “School of One had no statistically significant effects on student achievement—positive or negative–relative to traditional math instruction.”  In 2019,  a three-year federally-funded evaluation of the program’s implementation in Elizabeth NJ schools, entitled “Final Impact Results from the i3 Implementation of Teach to One: Math was released, also showing null results.  Unsurprisingly, neither of these studies have been featured in any follow-up piece in the NY Times or by Rosenberg in her column, which after all, focuses on “solutions” no matter how unreliable they may turn out to be.

Rosenberg also wrote not one but two columns praising “Flipped Classrooms,” which has also been one of Bill Gates’ favorite concepts – in which students watch video lessons at home such as those from the Khan Academy and then do their homework in class.  The Gates Foundation has given millions to flipped classrooms and to the Khan Academy, despite little research to back up this method of instruction.  

Since I wrote my blog on these Rosenberg’s columns, I noted that Bornstein has written two other pieces for the NY Times, one in 2012 and another in 2018, praising an ed tech software program called PowerMyLearning, which has received more than $11 million from the Gates Foundation since 2011.

Asked by Schwab if he could provide examples of any SJ critical reporting about Gates or the projects they support, David Bornstein responded, “Most of the stories that we fund are stories that look at efforts to solve problems, so they tend to be not as critical as traditional journalism."

Hmm.  If someone is  really interested in producing rigorous reporting on potential solutions to important public problems, wouldn't they want to cast an objective, analytic eye on whether these ideas really work? If not, aren't their columns really PR in disguise?

But perhaps the most troubling aspect of the “Fixes” columns in the NY Times is that they rarely mention that many the programs they promote are funded by Gates -- and in none of their columns do they reveal that the authors themselves work for an organization that is dependent on Gates Foundation support. This glaring conflict of interest and lack of disclosure appears to violate both the NY Times ethical standards, as I pointed out in my blog, and the standards of Solutions Journalism itself.  

The Times standards include this statement: 

 "…it is essential that we preserve a professional detachment, free of any whiff of bias... Scrupulous practice requires that periodically we step back and take a hard look at whether we have drifted too close to sources we deal with regularly... Staff members may not accept employment or compensation of any sort from individuals or organizations who figure or are likely to figure in coverage they provide, edit, package or supervise… In some cases, disclosure is enough. But if The Times considers the problem serious, the staff member may have to withdraw from certain coverage.”

These rules also pertain to reporters who are not formally on staff: “Our contracts with freelance contributors require them to avoid conflicts of interest, real or apparent."

The lack of disclosure also appears to violate the standards of Solutions Journalism itself. Here is the relevant passage on their webpage entitled Ethics:

“The Solutions Journalism Network is a nonpartisan organization committed to transparency and editorial independence. We do not support or advocate for any particular idea, model, organization, or agenda…. SJN’s grant recipients, whether newsrooms or individual journalists, should adhere to the highest standards of conduct as set forth in by bodies such as the Society of Professional Journalists…We require that our grant recipients remain completely transparent about any potential conflicts of interest that could arise in the context of reporting on an issue of interest to a Solutions Journalism Network funder.” 

In his CJR article, Tim Schwab asked Tina Rosenberg about these apparent, ongoing conflicts of interest in which she and Bornstein promote the work of Gates Foundation and its grantees.  She responded this way:  

“We do disclose our relationship with SJN in every column, and SJN’s funders are listed on our website. But you are correct that when we write about projects that get Gates funding, we should specifically say that SJN receives Gates funding as well....Our policy going forward with the NY Times will be clearer and will ensure disclosures.”  

Yet her response ignores that in many of her columns, there is no mention of her connection to Solutions Journalism, so that even the most interested reader would not be able to make that inference. Only beginning in May 2016 did the NY Times even identify her as a co-founder of SJ.  Moreover, after I raised these same concerns about the lack of disclosure of conflicts of interest on this blog over three years ago, I followed up by emailing the NYT ombudsperson twice, in August and October 2016, without any response. 

Even more troubling is how Rosenberg and Bornstein argue that there is no reason to disclose any potential conflict of interest in her columns praising Bridge International, since Bill Gates did not donate to these schools through his foundation, but directly via his personal wealth:

The writers argue that SJN’s ties are to the Gates Foundation, not to Bill Gates himself, so no disclosure is needed. “This is a significant distinction,” Rosenberg and Bornstein stated in an email.”

This claim represents an astonishing lapse of judgement. So, reporters can continue to praise the “solutions” provided by for-profit companies that Bill Gates has personally investments in, while getting their salaries partly subsidized by his Foundation, without any responsibility to admit to this potential conflict of interest? Meanwhile, his Foundation continues to provide Gates with a hefty tax deduction, helping him to accumulate even more wealth, which then he can invest in other, for-profit companies.  Without transparency, this lack of disclosure could be seen as a kind of money laundering. 

In any case, the NY Times does not seem eager to do its part to provide the minimal amount of candor required.  As Schwab writes:

Months after Bornstein and Rosenberg say they asked their editors to add financial disclosures to their columns, those pieces remain uncorrected. Marc Charney, a senior editor at the Times, said he wasn’t sure if or when the paper would add the disclosures, citing technical difficulties and other newsroom priorities. 

Technical difficulties?  Seems like a substantial, ongoing ethical failure to me.