Research framed around issues of diversity and representation in STEM is often controversial. The question of what constitutes a valid critique of such research, or the appropriate manner of airing such a critique, thus has a heavy ideological and political subtext. Here, we outline an attempt to comment on a paper recently published in the research journal Physical Review - Physics Education Research (PRPER). The article in question claimed to find evidence of 'whiteness' in introductory physics from analysis of a six-minute video. We argue that even if one accepts the rather tenuous proposition that 'whiteness' is sufficiently well defined to observe, the study lacks the proper controls, checks and methodology to allow for confirmation or disconfirmation of the authors' interpretation of the data. The authors of the whiteness study, however, make the stunning claim that their study cannot be judged by standards common in science. We summarize our written critique and its fate, along with a brief description of its genesis as a response to an article in which senior officers of the American Physical Society (which publishes PRPER) explained that the appropriate venue for addressing issues with the paper at hand is via normal editorial processes.
CITATION STYLE
Reichhardt, C., Small, A., Nisoli, C., & Reichhardt, C. (2023). Resistance to Critiques in the Academic Literature: An Example from Physics Education Research. European Review, 31(5), 547–555. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1062798723000352
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