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My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2014 2:57 pm
by Lord Jim
As a UNC alum this would have absolutely infuriated him:
Report Says UNC Grade-Boosting Scandal Involved Fake Classes

Fake classes, inflated grades and one academic department that facilitated it all. Those are all detailed in a newly released report on grade-fixing at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

The scandal came to light in 2011, but the report out Wednesday offers the most wide-sweeping look yet at how some school staff members boosted the grades of more than 3,000 students — nearly half of them athletes — over nearly 20 years.

The 131-page report centers on two people in the school's Department of African and Afro-American Studies: former Student Services Manager Deborah Crowder and Dr. Julius Nyang'oro, who became chairman of curriculum for the department known as AFAM in 1992.

According to the report, Crowder steered student-athletes toward fake classes for years to keep them eligible to play.

It states:

"Specifically, she designed and offered what are called 'paper classes.' These were classes that were taught on an independent study basis for students and student-athletes whom Crowder selected. Like traditional independent studies at Chapel Hill or any other campus, these classes entailed no class attendance and required only the submission of a single research paper. Unlike traditional independent studies, however, there was no faculty member involved in managing the course and overseeing the student's research and writing process. In fact, the students never had a single interaction with a faculty member; their only interaction was with Crowder, the Student Services Manager who was not a member of the University faculty."

After Crowder retired in 2009, Nyang'oro allegedly kept the grade-fixing scheme going.


University leadership ordered the independent investigation. It was conducted by Kenneth Wainstein, a former federal prosecutor. Among other key findings in the report:

Crowder and Nyang'oro "developed and ran a 'shadow curriculum' within the AFAM Department" between 1993 and 2011.

Student athletes make up just 4 percent of the student body at UNC Chapel Hill but constituted almost half of the students ID'd in the "paper classes." The "paper class" scheme went on for 18 years and included 188 courses. Some academic counselors in the school's athletic department helped steer student-athletes to the AFAM courses.

Crowder's retirement in 2009 worried counselors so much that they "instructed players to submit their papers before Crowder's departure to receive the benefit of her liberal grading."
The wrongdoing ended in 2011. And higher-ups at the school didn't try to "obscure the facts or the magnitude of this situation."

No other academic departments besides AFAM were involved.

UNC had a "loose, decentralized approach" to how it managed its academic departments that allowed the grade inflation to continue for years.

The report says Crowder "believed it was her duty to lend a helping hand to struggling students, and in particular to that subset of student-athletes who came to campus without adequate academic preparation for Chapel Hill's demanding curriculum."[She thought she was "helping" these people by denying them an actual education and giving them A's for phony classes? :loon :loon :loon]

The university released a statement on the report with an apology from UNC Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol L. Folt:

"I apologize first to the students who entrusted us with their education and took these courses. You deserved so much better from your University, and we will do everything we can to make it right... "I also want to apologize to the Carolina community — you have been hurt both directly and indirectly by this wrongdoing, even though you had no knowledge or responsibility for it, and many of you were not even here when most or all of it occurred."

North Carolina Public Radio has been following the story and reported Thursday that four UNC staff members have been fired and five others are under disciplinary review.

The university says it will take several actions in the wake of the report, including:

Launching a new public records website to "enhance accountability";
Adding faculty to a group to review student-athlete eligibility;
Establishing a working group to help people share concerns about academics;
And implementing a plan to "stabilize the Department of African, African American and Diaspora Studies."[Whoopee...What about resignations? Firings? A criminal investigation for fraud charges?]

WUNC's Jeff Tiberri reported on the story for All Things Considered on Thursday. He says UNC is not alone in controversies like this one. "There have been other scandals involving no-show, fake-paper classes at Auburn University and the University of Michigan," he said, adding, "This report is the most comprehensive of anything to date."

Tiberri also said that UNC has not yet indicated whether diplomas from the thousands of students who took the phony classes will be reviewed.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/201 ... ke-classes

This so appalling on so many levels and in so many ways it's hard to know where to start....

Liberal weekend MSNBC show host Melissa Harris-Perry (who for those not familiar with her is also an African American and a college professor) opened her show with this story and said she was particularly disgusted and angry at the fact that this occurred in the department of African and Afro-American Studies. She was incensed that this would happen after liberal academicians had fought so hard for the establishment of these departments, arguing that they would be legitimate and academically rigorous.

But to me the single most appalling aspect about this scandal is this:

188 courses, THREE THOUSAND STUDENTS, over 18 years...

And in all that time, with so many people aware of what was going on, (if 3000 students actually took the "courses" then the number who knew about them must be some multiple of that.) no one; not a soul...

Not a single student, not a single parent, not a single faculty member, not a single counselor, not a single administrator not a single coach or assistant coach... no-body

Came forward to blow the whistle on this wholesale fraud....

That fact completely blows me away. That something like this could go on for so long, with so many people being aware of it, and nobody speaking up...

To me that seems like a really sad and depressing commentary on the direction that personal integrity has taken in this country among far too many of my fellow citizens.... :(

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2014 8:47 pm
by Gob
"I got a degree in reedin and riting and runnin."

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2014 9:04 pm
by wesw
the only thing abou this whole story that surprises me , is that harris-perry is a college professor. that s scary!

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2014 11:49 pm
by Lord Jim
She was at LSU, she just recently took a position at Wake Forest.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 12:10 am
by rubato
The big two division 1 sports have been the tail wagging the dog of many universities for a long time.


MIT and Cal Tech are respected academic institutions worldwide. UNC is a 'basketball powerhouse'. Depends of what matters to you.


the NCAA should issue the 'death penalty' more often for this kind of corruption.


yrs,
rubato

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 1:27 pm
by Big RR
MIT and Cal Tech are respected academic institutions worldwide. UNC is a 'basketball powerhouse'. Depends of what matters to you.
And Stanford is? Berkley? UCLA? Duke? Georgetown? There are a good number academically rigorous schools which have been able to field decent teams while withstanding the pressure.

And FWIW, despite being a basketball powerhouse, UNC has some pretty good departments and professors; I am familiar with their molecular biology department which often partners with area industry and is one of the best in the country.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 2:49 pm
by liberty
Jim, honor is in great shape in our country especially in the liberal community.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 3:50 pm
by Guinevere
With the lawsuits against the NCAA trying to get compensation for student athletes, just shows how far down the path we have all gone. Do what the Ivies do -- scholarships based on need, or academic merit, not athletics. We still field some good teams and even grow the occasional professional athlete.

Liberty, grow up, take some responsibility, and stop blaming everything on "the liberal community."

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 4:15 pm
by Big RR
Guin--the reason they don't do what the Ivy leaguers do is that the big time universities have become the defacto minor leagues for the NFL and NBA. Sure, every so often Harvard or Yale gets a player who turns pro, but most come from the powerhouse schools who fuel the drafts every year.

Personally, I'd be happy to see the pretense done away with and the "students" just be university employees who play for a few years before entering the big leagues, but that's not to be. But the kids who go there know their first job is to play football or basketball, not to go to class or study, no matter what the university spin doctors say. Every so often you will find a major thlete in one of these schools who is also a scholar, but they are few and far between.

Some schools do better than others (like Stanford and Berkley), but no one does all that well. Face it, practicing from 3:00-7:00 each day, then watching films and hitting the weights or getting PT, coupled with travelling from Thursday-Monday 4-7 times a semester leaves a football player little time for much else; basketball scheduling is worse. Add to that the fact that many of the kids recruited cannot perform academically at a college level and are only there for their shot at the pros--graduation rates are pretty bad for all but a few big name schools, and everyone but the schools can see where that leads.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 5:33 pm
by Guinevere
I think they should do the opposite, and just give up the defacto minor league status, and actually focus on the education --- that in many cases our taxes dollars are subsidizing. Or, if the kids want to skip college and go right into pro sports, then create a mandatory minor league process, with some minimal practical education. The major leagues will still get their stars and makes their bucks. They need to stop doing so at the expense of educating young minds.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 5:40 pm
by Big RR
It wouldn't bother me if the schools did give it up, but govern all the money involved and the amount of funds intercollegiate sports generates for the few top schools (and which most major schools aspire to), I doubt they would give up this system.

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 8:36 pm
by liberty
Guinevere wrote:With the lawsuits against the NCAA trying to get compensation for student athletes, just shows how far down the path we have all gone. Do what the Ivies do -- scholarships based on need, or academic merit, not athletics. We still field some good teams and even grow the occasional professional athlete.

Liberty, grow up, take some responsibility, and stop blaming everything on "the liberal community."
Well I can't say how grown up I am, but if I am not grown by now it is a bit late. However, that would be subjective anyway, would it not be? But as far as honor is concerned I am holding up my end; it is one of the first things that passes through my mind when I interact with the world.

And as far as the liberal community is concerned, I don't blame everything bad on them, they done a lot of good, it has been a while. But would you consider the African, African-American studies Department at UNC to be a hot bed of conservative thought?

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 12:29 am
by rubato
Big RR wrote:
MIT and Cal Tech are respected academic institutions worldwide. UNC is a 'basketball powerhouse'. Depends of what matters to you.
And Stanford is? Berkley? UCLA? Duke? Georgetown? There are a good number academically rigorous schools which have been able to field decent teams while withstanding the pressure.

And FWIW, despite being a basketball powerhouse, UNC has some pretty good departments and professors; I am familiar with their molecular biology department which often partners with area industry and is one of the best in the country.

Stanford is the real outlier in that group. Academically rigorous and makes fewer exceptions for athletes. UCB has had recent scandals indicating that their football program is not only not very successful on the field but graduates a tiny fraction of players. Truly embarrassing. They should shut down the football program altogether. There is no added value there. UCLA has slipped in the rankings for both football and b-ball possibly because they have kept a better perspective. Division 1 B-ball and football are inherently corrupting influences which is why almost no program is immune. It is only a matter of degree.

The NCAA should tell all the schools that ALL student athletes must meet the same admission criteria as the median student to that institution.


yrs,
rubato

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2014 12:59 pm
by rubato
To underline the point, division 1 basketball and football are inherently corrupting and it is only a matter of degree how corrupt each institution has become because of it.


The child rape coverup scandal at Penn was driven partly by this.


yrs,
rubato

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2014 4:52 pm
by Guinevere
rubato wrote:To underline the point, division 1 basketball and football are inherently corrupting and it is only a matter of degree how corrupt each institution has become because of it.


The child rape coverup scandal at Penn was driven partly by this.


yrs,
rubato

Penn State. Completely different entity than what is referred to as "Penn" (aka, the University of Pennsylvania, which is part of the afore-mentioned Ivy League).

Re: My Father Must Be Spinning In His Grave...

Posted: Fri Oct 31, 2014 1:22 am
by dgs49
Div III. FOR EVERYONE. No scholarships, no full time coaches. Just like the rest of the world.