šŸˆ Academic fraud probe at UNC reveals more than 3,100 students involved

PhillyGirl

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http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/ncaaf...dent-athletes-to-bogus-classes-181214478.html

The University of North Carolina Academic Support Program for Student-Athletes was found culpable of creating easy, non-show classes that catered to student-athletes in an effort to give them better grades.

Kenneth Wainstein, a former top U.S. Justice Department official, said during a press conference Wednesday that academic counselors ushered as many as 3,100 students – approximately 1,500 of them student-athletes – into bogus classes that were geared toward keeping student-athletes eligible for play over the past 18 years (1993-2011).

The academic impropriety in Wainstein's report is far greater than previously reported by the school or to the NCAA.

Wainstein said many academic and athletic officials knew about the scheme, which began with Deborah Crowder, a longtime manager for the Department of African and Afro-American Studies, and gave student-athletes inflated grades for what Wainstein termed ā€œpaper classes.ā€

Paper classes were essentially classes that were independent study, had no professor and just required a paper at the end of the term. According to Wainstein, Crowder never gave students a grade unless they actually submitted a paper, but she awarded ā€œartificially highā€ grades to the papers submitted regardless of their content.

In the end, the disparity was clear. Students enrolled in an Afro-American Studies paper class would finish with a 3.62 GPA versus a 3.28 GPA for students in a regular Afro-American Studies course.

For 81 students, the GPA boost from those paper classes gave them a 2.0 GPA that allowed them to graduate from UNC.

In all, athletes made up about 47 percent of the enrollments in the 188 lecture-classified paper classes. Of that group, 51 percent were football players.

Chancellor Carol Folt said during the news conference that she was shocked to learn that the academic improprieties were well known around campus and that no one did anything to stop them. Instead, the culture was allowed to fester simply to keep football players and other student-athletes eligible and counselors were not only knowingly enrolling student-athletes in these bogus classes, they were steering them in that direction.

ā€œLike everyone who read it, I feel shocked and very disappointed,ā€ Folt said. ā€œI think it’s a case where you have bad actions of a few and inaction of many more. And had actions or processes been in place, we could’ve caught it and stopped it a lot sooner.ā€

Wainstein did note that he found no evidence that coaches or other athletic officials began this scheme and there was no financial incentive involved. Butch Davis, the UNC football coach at the time, said he did know the classes were easier, but had no idea an administrator and not a professor graded them.

However, Crowder said she felt pressure to create the paper class, which was later continued by Crowder’s boss, longtime department chairman Julius Nyang’oro, after Crowder retired.

Wainstein’s report was conducted over eight months and included 126 interviews. He said he did not find involvement at the highest levels of the institution, but did criticize the school for not noticing the red flags.

The NCAA and UNC released a joint statement Wednesday saying the investigation was ongoing, but did not mention whether sanctions would be coming.

"The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and the NCAA enforcement staff continue to engage in an independent and cooperative effort to review information of possible NCAA rules violations as announced earlier this year. The university provided the enforcement staff with a copy of the Wainstein Report for its consideration. The information included in the Wainstein Report will be reviewed by the university and the enforcement staff under the same standards that are applied in all NCAA infractions cases. Due to rules put in place by the NCAA membership, neither the university nor the enforcement staff will comment on the substance of the report as it relates to possible NCAA rules violations."
 
Loss of institutional control any way you slice it. This makes the bogus sociology courses at Auburn, or the psychology courses at Michigan seem benign by comparison. At least in these tow cases the schools acted quickly to shut these classes down once they were outed.

It boggles the minds in two respects. The first is that a university which has long touted its academic reputation should let this go on for so long. I know the administrators said they did not know about this, but I am sure there is 'plausible deniability' here. Lots of wink, wink, nod, nod. Perhaps someone even said that we need to help our athletes stay eligible.

The second mind boggler is that with all this effort to keep football players eligible, they sure didn't get much out of it. NC football has been mired in mediocrity for almost as long as the school has been playing football.

Whether the hammer comes down, or all this is quietly swept under the rug only time will tell.
 
Any African and Afro Study majors out there? It must be nice to get credit for classes you don't have to attend or write a bogus paper that is going to get an A or a B without any effort. Come to think of it, I may need to pick up a few hours. :-)
 
When I read about this on twitter and reading up on it via the news today it certainly seemed that this could easily get the LOIC. They've devalued the UNC degree...

John Infante's take...



This is such a slam dunk case of lack of institutional control that I believe it does not even need the underlying academic fraud violation. Such a case is essentially unprecedented save the Penn State case and that was exceptional in many other ways. But it is warranted here. The NCAA cannot allow an athletic department to have the type of sway over the academic functions of the university that UNC’s did. This goes beyond athletics to the over 1,500 non-athlete students that took the bogus classes as well, albeit it not without some fault of their own in many cases.
 
Loss of institutional control any way you slice it. This makes the bogus sociology courses at Auburn, or the psychology courses at Michigan seem benign by comparison. At least in these tow cases the schools acted quickly to shut these classes down once they were outed.

It boggles the minds in two respects. The first is that a university which has long touted its academic reputation should let this go on for so long. I know the administrators said they did not know about this, but I am sure there is 'plausible deniability' here. Lots of wink, wink, nod, nod. Perhaps someone even said that we need to help our athletes stay eligible.

The second mind boggler is that with all this effort to keep football players eligible, they sure didn't get much out of it. NC football has been mired in mediocrity for almost as long as the school has been playing football.

Whether the hammer comes down, or all this is quietly swept under the rug only time will tell.

I see this in the same arena as Auburn. It's not a LOIC with the athletic department, but it's something that falls under the purview of SACS.

EDIT: Now that I've read Infante's piece...seems I'm thinking along the same lines as he is...

IF I was a UNC grad, I'd be pissed off.

Good point about what it resulted in with the football program. If it were a SEC team, it would be like keeping players eligible to ensure an invitation to Shreveport.
 
Any African and Afro Study majors out there? It must be nice to get credit for classes you don't have to attend or write a bogus paper that is going to get an A or a B without any effort. Come to think of it, I may need to pick up a few hours. :-)

Make sure you do it at UNC, cuz it's a challenging major according to my friend who majored in it at Columbia! She damn near went bald pulling her hair out over her research papers .. blech.
 
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — A scandal involving bogus classes and inflated grades at the University of North Carolina was bigger than previously reported, encompassing about 1,500 athletes who got easy A's and B's over a span of nearly two decades, according to an investigation released Wednesday.

At least nine university employees were fired or under disciplinary review, and the question now becomes what, if anything, the NCAA will do next. Penalties could range from fewer scholarships to vacated wins.

Most of the athletes were football players or members of the school's cherished basketball program, which won three of its five national titles during the scandal (1993, 2005, 2009).

Athletic director Bubba Cunningham wouldn't speculate on any possible sanctions.

"We'll work with the NCAA and work through the report with them as part of our ongoing investigation," Cunningham said. "That's going to take some time."

In all, about 3,100 students enrolled in classes they didn't have to show up for in what was deemed a "shadow curriculum" within the former African and Afro-American Studies (AFAM) department from 1993 to 2011, the report by former U.S. Justice Department official Kenneth Wainstein found.

Many at the university hoped Wainstein's eight-month investigation would bring some closure. Instead, it found more academic fraud than previous investigations by the NCAA and the school.

The UNC case stands out among academic scandals at Harvard, Duke and the Naval Academy, said Howard Gardner, a professor at Harvard's Graduate School of Education who studies cheating.

"I think the existence of fake classes and automatic grades — you might say an athlete track, where essentially you might as well not have the university at all — I think that's pretty extreme. I hope it's pretty extreme," he said.

The scandal reached back to the final years of legendary men's basketball coach Dean Smith's tenure, as well as Mack Brown's time as football coach before leaving for Texas and John Swofford's stint as athletic director before becoming Atlantic Coast Conference commissioner.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/22/unc-academic-fraud-report_n_6029350.html
 
Definitely see this going down the path of the Barner sociology arena. SACS will have a field day with this. Any UNC alum should be pissed! If they aren't, they must have earned the same degree.
 
20 championships could be up in the air...lots of banners to be removed.

Men's Basketball - 1993, 2005, 2009
Men's Soccer - 2011
Women's Basketball - 1994
Women's Field Hockey - 1995, 1996, 1997, 2007, 2009
Women's Soccer - 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2009
 
Why didn't they just have basket weaving 101 like some other schools do.

I am sure that every school has a course here or there where they direct their athletes with GPA issues. UT was famous for their 'walking' and 'chair stacking' courses within their PE curriculum when fulmer was there. When Linda Benzel Meyers outed this, they went into denial mode, but they shut it down
 
20 championships could be up in the air...lots of banners to be removed.

Men's Basketball - 1993, 2005, 2009
Men's Soccer - 2011
Women's Basketball - 1994
Women's Field Hockey - 1995, 1996, 1997, 2007, 2009
Women's Soccer - 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2009

UNC fans sitting in their homes like:

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Brenda-Meeks-Scared-Popcorn-Gif-In-Scary-Movie.gif
 
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