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OT: UNC Scandal Reaches Another Level

RUinPinehurst

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Aug 27, 2011
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Recent reports confirm the athletic-driven "academic" scandal went beyond the Afro & African American Studies dept and beyond undergraduate courses.

See below for an Opinion piece from Raleigh's N&O, or online at: http://www.newsobserver.com/2015/03/02/4594813/unc-scandal-raises-new-questions.html

UNC scandal raises new questions at grad level:
The UNC athletic-academic scandal spreads to the grad-school level.

March 2, 2015

The academic-athletics scandal at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is like the mythical multi-headed Hydra serpent battled by Hercules. Every time he cut off one of the Hydra's heads, two more grew back.

So it has been at UNC-CH. After multiple swipes at getting to the bottom of the scandal, the extensive $3 million Wainstein report appeared to expose the full extent of academic fraud. It documented how athletes were kept eligible over a period of nearly 20 years through phony classes in the former African and African-American Studies Department. Now the scandal has moved from those undergraduate classes to graduate classes in the Exercise and Sports Science Department.

In a report Sunday, The News & Observer's Dan Kane published charges by Cheryl Thomas, the graduate school's admissions director from 2002 to 2010. She says athletic officials sought to keep players eligible by having them enrolled in graduate school. According to university correspondence, at least one of those athletes, former UNC football player Michael Waddell, ignored his academic responsibilities once he was enrolled in 2003. Waddell had gained admission under an arrangement worked out by then-senior associate athletic director John Blanchard, but Waddell didn't show for classes or tests.

When the athletics department pressed to have Waddell admitted, Thomas objected to her superiors that Waddell had not applied in time and was not academically qualified.

"They know he has not applied and would not meet the minimum requirements for admission, yet (the Exercise and Sports Science Department) is willing to accept him as a non-degree seeking, one semester only, graduate student so his football eligibility will continue, if the (graduate school) will allow it," Thomas wrote to Linda Dykstra, the graduate school dean.

After Waddell was kicked out of grad school after receiving four Fs, Kevin Guskiewicz, a professor and director of Exercise and Sports Science's graduate studies program, sent a letter to Blanchard saying his program had been abused.

"We were willing to accept Michael Waddell and his very marginal undergraduate GPA because we believed that helping a student, and a group of colleagues in the Athletic Department, was the right thing to do at the time," Guskiewicz wrote. "Four months later, we now look foolish."

The Waddell case is significant beyond the incidence of one athlete given special academic cover to stay eligible. The Guskiewicz letter and Thomas' statements show that a senior athletics department official pushed for special deals with the academic side to keep athletes eligible. That raises fresh doubts about his claims that Blanchard was unaware of the extent of fraud in the African studies classes. And if someone at Blanchard's level was willing to cut corners, how many other top athletic department officials and coaches were aware?

This is hardly only a case of athletics officials trying to bend the rules. Academic officials also failed to block such abuse even when alerted by the director of admissions. Now there are new questions about how far the abuses spread on the academic side and how high up there was knowledge of such abuses. It now seems a very long time ago that UNC officials were trying to say this scandal was confined to an inattentive professor and a misguided office administrator in the African studies department.

These revelations are enough, but there is also evidence of neglect, incompetence or worse when Thomas tried to bring the abuse to light. Shortly after the Wainstein report came out in October, she sent the correspondence regarding Waddell to Wainstein, the NCAA and the commission that accredits UNC. She said all acknowledged receiving the correspondence. After nearly three months of waiting for an official response, Thomas turned her material over to The News & Observer in January.

http://www.newsobserver.com/2015/03/02/4594813/unc-scandal-raises-new-questions.html
 
F$U, UNC, Cuse, now Dook. ACC = Athletic Coverup Conference


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This post was edited on 3/3 7:10 AM by LC-88
 
It seems the ACC has the right commissioner, John Swofford, who helped coverup decades of scandal at UNC. How does Swofford not get more scrutiny now? How does even keep that job? The guy who personally oversaw the Athletic dept that had decades worth of phony classes, now phony grad school admittences,
Originally posted by LC-88:
F$U, UNC, Cuse, now Dook. ACC = Athletic Coverup Conference


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This post was edited on 3/3 7:10 AM by LC-88
oversees the Coverup Conference with Fla St, Syracuse and apparently even Duke covering up a rape.
 
UNC was my dream school growing up as a kid in NC, before moving to jersey in 9th grade. Damn what a shame they've brought on themselves. This is as bad as SMU
 
i believe that FSU graduates the lowest percentage of scholarship African American footballers in the country. Yet these kids fall over themselves to go there which i get - FSU is going to look great during the NFL draft - just not so good at the school graduation ceremony.

UNC is just sad. In football, they've cheated their way to mediocrity.
 
Why are we not hearing more about DUKE in the mainstream media?

And what is Cuse self imposing on themselves,,what did they do?
 
I flicked on ESPN Radio for 5 minutes today. They were discussing it and had Pat Forde on about on, however, they were discussing it in their non-opinionated, full of disclaimers way. How does anyone listen to those guys?
 
Originally posted by mikefla:
Why are we not hearing more about DUKE in the mainstream media?

And what is Cuse self imposing on themselves,,what did they do?
Not to defend Duke here, but from what I've heard, the female "victims" in this case filed no complaint with the police or the university, so there's not much for anyone to really do. And Duke ended up with some egg on it's face with the lacrosse accusations which were similarly made on rumor and innuendo.

Cuse hoops gave themselves a post-season ban . . . once it was clear they weren't going to the post-season anyway.
 
NCAA says it has no legal responsibility for UNC academic fraud - CBSSports.com
Having trouble posting a working link


http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/writer/jon-solomon/25088642/ncaa-says-it-has-no-legal-responsibility-for-unc-academic-fraud
This post was edited on 3/3 11:08 AM by MADHAT1

The NCAA says it is not legally responsible for any academic fraud that may have occurred at North Carolina . College sports' governing body wants a lawsuit filed by two former North Carolina athletes moved from state to federal court.


In January, former North Carolina women's basketball player Rashanda McCants and former football player Devon Ramsay sued the university and the NCAA in relation to the school's academic scandal with fake classes. The complaint, filed in North Carolina state court, accuses the NCAA of negligence because it knew of other instances of academic fraud for the past century and refused to implement adequate monitoring systems."This case is troubling for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that the law does not and has never required the NCAA to ensure that every student-athlete is actually taking full advantage of the academic and athletic opportunities provides to them," NCAA chief legal officer Donald Remy said in a statement, adding that many athletes maximize their educational opportunities.

In a news release last Friday, the NCAA said moving the case to federal court is appropriate "based on the federal law that confers jurisdiction over class actions of this nature to the federal courts." Former North Carolina football player Michael McAdoo filed a similar suit in federal court last November against only North Carolina, not the NCAA.

Michael Hausfeld, a lead attorney for McCants and Ramsay, said in January that he sued in state court because, "If you look at the legal ability to sue in North Carolina, you can't do it in federal court. There's statutory immunity." The other attorney on the McCants case is retired North Carolina Supreme Court justice Robert Orr.

Hausfeld is the attorney who recently defeated the NCAA (pending appeal) in the Ed O'Bannon case over the commercial use of athletes' names, images and likenesses. His latest suit attempts to attack the heart of college sports: The NCAA's stated mission of educating athletes in exchange for their participation in sports.

The McCants suit attacks the NCAA's knowledge that time demands for players often exceed the weekly 20-hour rule; the NCAA's lowering of initial eligibility standards through the years; and the NCAA's focus on progress toward degree rather than the quality of the education. The plaintiffs seek unspecified damages and the formation of an independent commission to review academic integrity at NCAA schools and compare the education between athletes and the rest of the student body.

The NCAA said the McCants lawsuit "misunderstands" the association's role with member schools and ignores "myriad steps" the NCAA has taken to assist athletes in the classroom. The NCAA cited eligibility standards for players and Academic Progress Rate requirements that can result in teams missing the postseason.

The NCAA said it remains "vigilant" in reviewing violations of academic misconduct and penalizing when appropriate. Last June, the NCAA said it had re-opened its investigation into North Carolina.

One legal strategy used by the NCAA in this case has become apparent.

"Courts have concluded in similar cases that standard-setting organizations cannot be held liable for the actions of their members," NCAA outside counsel Walter Dellinger said in a statement. "The NCAA is not legally responsible for any academic fraud that may have occurred at UNC."

Meanwhile, Mary Willingham, who helped expose North Carolina's academic fraud to the Raleigh News & Observer in 2011, said Monday that she won't accept the NCAA's request to be interviewed in the NCAA investigation of North Carolina.

“If they're not going to be responsible in real court or under United States law for providing real education as a regulatory bylaw, then why should it matter because all I have to tell them is students didn't get a real education?” Willingham said.

Willingham said she met with NCAA enforcement officials on Feb. 20 but declined to be interviewed upon learning that her statements would immediately be turned over to North Carolina as part of a joint investigation. At the time, Willingham was completing a settlement with North Carolina over a lawsuit she filed last summer contending that the university retaliated against her for blowing the whistle about academic fraud.

“I settled, but on the day of the settlement both parties agreed not to sue each other up to a date that has now passed,” Willingham said. “Now I'm going to meet with the NCAA and open myself up to litigation where the university could sue me over something I did or didn't say? What if I say to the NCAA I knew this, but North Carolina says in 2007 you didn't say this so you were lying and now we're going to sue you?”

Willingham was harshly criticized by North Carolina last year when she alleged some of the athletes placed in the fraudulent classes had reading skills at elementary-school levels. North Carolina hired experts to refute her research, but didn't dive into diagnostic tests and other materials that might show the athletes' preparedness academically, according to The News & Observer.

NCAA assistant director of enforcement Todd Shumaker sent an email Monday to Willingham's attorney asking if she is now willing to be interviewed given her settlement. Willingham said she would have spoken with the NCAA for several years and was under the impression that everything she provided North Carolina had been turned over to the NCAA.

“I figured if they wanted to talk to me, they would call me,” she said. “As time went by, I was pretty surprised I hadn't heard from anybody. I figured just like the university, they didn't want to discuss this. … If the NCAA wants to depose me and take me to court, do it. Otherwise, game over.”
This post was edited on 3/3 9:10 AM by MADHAT1

This post was edited on 3/3 11:11 AM by MADHAT1
 
The NCAA may not feel it has any responsibility regarding the lawsuit filed against UNC by its former "students" but certainly has responsibility to uphold its own policies about eligibility, cheating, etc. Why has it still done nothing? This has been out in the public domain for two years already but the silence from the NCAA is deafening.
 
Is this about ONE grad student?

Is this about ONE grad student who abused the system and was allowed to knowingly abuse it by AD people?

The story in the OP reads like the grad school knew they made a mistake (and I would assume they would have not allowed it to happen again).

What about the profs and TAs who have sex with students and adjust their scores accordingly? Or they help out those of similar political interests? Let us not pretend that big money athletics is the only reason that the system is abused.
 
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