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Not to mention that Carnegie Mellon has no problem with her putting ALB Harvard University on her CV
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The woman you cited has about a dozen versions of her resume posted on the internet: speaker bios at conferences, several versions of the CV on her own website, CMU faculty listing, etc. None of these documents contains the words "Extension School" or "Extension Studies", which are what appear on the ALB diploma. It is easy to find documents where she or CMU advertise her connections to Harvard and MIT, but none where they indicate that the Harvard connection was to HES.
HES, on the other hand, proudly lists her as an alumna, and HES/DCE web sites are the only places where one can find her Extension affiliation mentioned. So it seems the love runs only in one direction.
This pattern is absolutely typical, as you can see by performing a web search for "ALB Harvard" and count how the hits go down when you add the words "Extension School" or "Extension Studies". Lots of CVs with the first come up, but almost none come up that explicitly list the affiliation to the Extension School. This is different from all the other schools at Harvard; people with certificates from the Education or Divinity schools (not exactly the height of prestige or admissions difficulty by Harvard grad school standards) almost always list those schools along with the degree. It is different with the Extension School.