N & O: “Carolina way” has become a joke

 

The raging academic scandal at UNC-CH keeps picking up momentum.  An editorial in today’s News and Observer goes further than any such piece produced so far.  An excerpt:

The university, which used to boast of its “clean” athletics program, the “Carolina way,” has always maintained that it does not treat athletes different from other students, that they are not guided to courses designed to keep them eligible because of easy material or agreeable professors.

That sanctimony, especially, makes this latest development an outrage. And Chancellor Holden Thorp remains evidently reluctant to ask and answer the questions that linger, questions that must be answered before all those broken hearts Hargrove has been talking about can be mended.

They include:

How was it possible for this course to be added to the summer school list, for Nyang’oro to take it over from the professor who normally would have taught it and for it to include only football players (who knew to register for it within days of registration opening) without someone in the academic support staff or in the university’s middle-level administration not raising an eyebrow, and more?

What do students who were in the class say? Do Thorp and others want to find out?

The editorial goes on to raise the really big issue pending at the moment — questioning the investigative vigor UNC-CH has shown:

Thorp has tackled the issue at those points where The N&O has obtained records and reported on what happened, or didn’t happen, but he hasn’t seemed to push for a really aggressive investigation – even while the university’s academic standards have been corrupted and the “Carolina way” has become a joke.

This is not the only editorial making the rounds today.  Scott Mooneyham wrote a piece that was published first by the NC Insider and subsequently is being picked up by some other outlets.  Mooneyham does an amazing job pulling back the curtain on the so-called investigation undertaken by UNC-CH so far.  An excerpt:

Last summer, after former UNC-Chapel Hill football player Michael McAdoo was shown to have plagiarized a paper, chancellor Holden Thorp said he didn’t intend to question the professor who accepted the paper.

“We’ve done a very thorough investigation on the academic side,” Thorp said at the time.

A month later, The News & Observer of Raleigh showed that the same professor taught an advanced course to a star football player just as he arrived on campus and before ever taking a basic writing course.

Thorp responded by ordering an internal review. Six months later, a 10-page report outlined 54 irregularly-taught courses in the department overseen by the professor, Julius Nyang’oro.

The report concluded that athletes received no favorable treatment relative to the rest of the student body, making no mention of the percentage of athletes enrolled in the courses.

Thorp called the review thorough and diligent.

Subsequent media requests led to revelations that a majority of those enrolled in the courses were athletes.

Now, News & Observer reporter Dan Kane has revealed that one of the suspect courses, which involved no instruction, was created by Nyang’oro just two days before the start of a summer school semester in 2011. Of the 19 students who enrolled, 18 were football players and one was a former football player.

Mooneyham concludes:

Among the questions that need answering:

_ Who told football players to enroll in these classes? Why these classes and not others? Did the advisers assigned to athletes know about the academic fraud? Did they have any conversations with athletic department officials regarding this class or others taught by Nyang’oro?

_ Where was the oversight of Nyang’oro and his courses? Did his assignment to so many summer school courses violate university policy? If not, why not? If so, why was it allowed?

_ Finally, what role did Thorp himself play, in his previous job as dean of the College of Arts & Sciences, in any lack of oversight of Nyang’oro’s department, his course assignments, and the athletic academic support staff, which also reports to the college?

It’s time for the truth.

Wow!  I should also mention that this latest story is now being picked up nationally, with USA Today , The Sporting News, and yahoo basically running the N & O piece.  Yahoo makes a point to quote this hilarious sentence from the N & O article:

Other records show that football and basketball players made up a majority of the enrollments of nine particularly suspect classes in which the professors listed as instructors have denied involvement, and have claimed that signatures were forged on records related to them.

That is some fantastic national press for the flagship! Also, Robbi Pickeral with ESPN is doing some preliminary exploration of this pdf provided by the N & O last Friday.  In my opinion, that pdf, which breaks down the enrollments in the suspect classes, will turn out to be a gold mine once people really start sifting through it.

Stay tuned.

 

 

General

91 Responses to N & O: “Carolina way” has become a joke

  1. TruthBKnown Returns 06/13/2012 at 9:21 AM #

    It’s not a Lack of Institutional Control, really. The institution was in complete control. I don’t buy for a minute that Nyangaboro did all this on his own. No chance.

    That is why I am hoping they treat him so badly that he will spill some beans. But I’m not counting on that. So far, every person that was a scapegoat came through this with a nice golden parachute of some kind to buy their silence.

    I just hope someone over there decides it is better to come clean than to stay dirty and accept hush money. At some point, that will surely happen… right? Can they ALL be bad apples???

  2. Prowling Woofie 06/13/2012 at 9:31 AM #

    University of No Conscience…

    No shame, no moral fiber. From the top down. Been that way for decades

  3. HPWolf 06/13/2012 at 9:48 AM #

    Talk about a slow death from a thousand paper cuts. I don’t understand why someone with a brain over in Chapel Hell wouldn’t want everything out on the table so they could truly begin to start over. They are begging for an independent investigation. Carolina doesn’t have the academic integrity of your local community college and that statement is not just coming from a state grad. Its the honest truth.

  4. Greywolf 06/13/2012 at 9:54 AM #

    Let them keep it up, keep on denying any wrong doing by the University, just ‘rogue’ professors, tutors, department heads and secretaries, football players, etc.

    Cheaters think they are smarter than other people and will not get caught — that they can talk their way out of trouble when they get caught. The scab is about to be pulled off this sore and when it does, we are going to see trouble like we’ve never seen before. This will make The Great Tickets and Shoes Scandal look like fudging on your expense account.

  5. highstick 06/13/2012 at 10:08 AM #

    Vtpackfan brings up a question I’ve had for a long time. I actually started a comment the other day and then got distracted so that I never finished.

    Obviously the academic issues have to be catching the eye of the various accreditation boards. Maybe someone can shed some insight on what might be happening there. I’m thinking a year or so ago when the “Cam Sham” was going on that I read Auburn had been flirting with disaster on the accreditation side for several years. I can’t verify that as truth but it was mentioned several times on the long thread about Auburn.

  6. coach13 06/13/2012 at 10:40 AM #

    The only thing UNC alums are outraged about is that the media and State fans want let it die. My distatse for everything and everybody UNC, when I think is at an all time high, gets higher and higher with time.

    I have a buddy of mine I grew up with. Good guy. Smart. Was a conservative Republican like myself growing up. Saw him the other day and he now dislikes the Republicans in office(state). See, he went to UNC, got his law degree, a practicing lawyer. His explanation for the change of heart was not that he thought what the Republicans were doing in office was bad for North Carolina, just that it was bad for his business.

    I don’t think integrity and UNC-CH have anything in common. You may go in with it, but good luck coming out with it.

  7. Gowolves 06/13/2012 at 10:49 AM #

    Coach13

    First of all not defending a tarheel I am just sayin….

    Not sure how your story relates to this subject but everyone votes with regards to their wallet to some degree. I think it is a stretch to question ones integrity on the college of choice. You are painting with a broad brush.

    Maybe you are leaving some information out. You know him better than me.

  8. packalum44 06/13/2012 at 11:16 AM #

    GAWolf or any other attorneys…have any FEDERAL LAWS potentially been violated? If so, what? I have friends in low places that I would love to hear their thoughts but need specific violations.

    To me, this seems to involve fraud with tax payers’ money. This is where the potential for Fed involvement comes in. (I don’t trust the SBI farther than I can throw them and am not satisfied w/ their involvement.)

    Also, SBI will not investigate NCAA issues or anything but legal violations. That is a fairly narrow scope. Therefore, we still must fight for a holistic independent investigation to truly discover the deceit and fraud that has taken place.

  9. ncsu1987 06/13/2012 at 12:03 PM #

    The PTB at the cesspool are playing a delicate little game here, walking an increasingly narrow line. They are still hoping for containment. Right now, although there are a couple of rogue media outlets in the network, the coverage and digging is still relatively narrow (and local) in scope. As long as they keep it from going national in a big way, expect little change. The BOG has their back, no matter how “disturbed” some of them may claim to be. There will NEVER be an independent investigation unless containment is breached.

  10. NCSU88 06/13/2012 at 12:16 PM #

    This crisis is a fine example of progressive flooding from a nautical stance. Just keeps getting worse and bigger. Eventually the ship will sink. And to think it all started with a simple Tweet. Social media is a powerful thing.

  11. db321 06/13/2012 at 12:33 PM #

    Rochester wrote, “It’s not a Lack of Institutional Control, really. The institution was in complete control. I don’t buy for a minute that Nyangaboro did all this on his own. No chance.”

    Agreed. The real qustion is who went to Julius Nyang’oro and got him to add that class just a few days before summer school started for all these football and basketball players. Someone from the athletic department or maybe even Butch Davis himself had to have lined that class up. Phone records from that time period should be requested to see who Nyang’oro spoke with the days leading up to that course addition. If athletic department officials organized the addition of the class, then it would prove that it wasn’t a rogue professor. It would prove that the whole system was rigged and the institution as a whole was cheating. UNC is simply trying to cover all this up…that’s why Thorp continues to push the lie that they’ve done a “thorough” investigation when in fact they clearly have not. Had they done a thorough investigation then they would have uncovered the McAdoo plagarism. Had they done a thorough investigation after “discovering”, from NC State fans, the McAdoo plagarism, then they would have found out about these highly suspect professor-less classes that were added at the last minute and filled with football and basketball players. There’s a story here…a big story…and a cover up. The academic fraud is a huge problem itself, but the misuse of taxpayer money by school officials to setup teacherless classes and use tax money to pay for these classes is the biggest issue and shows a completely out of control institution. Hopefully someone in the media has the balls to go after UNC and shine the light on all the skeletons in the closet.

  12. Prowling Woofie 06/13/2012 at 1:48 PM #

    Roy Williams will be on David Glenn’s show tomorrow…

    Wonder if Glenn will ask him about anything other than his recruiting or his former player’s draft prospects ?

  13. Hawkeye Whitney 06/13/2012 at 1:56 PM #

    I have a degree from NCSU, which I cherish, and one from UNC, which I view as a necessary evil in order to pursue my chosen profession. At first I took a bit of guilty pleasure in UNC’s problems, but now I am a bit upset. They have devalued my degree and the degree of every other UNC graduate at least a little. I know the “death penalty” is extreme in college sports, but what else is going to teach UNC a lesson other than shuttering Kenan Stadium for a year or two?

  14. wilmwolf80 06/13/2012 at 2:00 PM #

    Whatever happened with the loose connection that was made between Nyang’oro and Marvin’s “people”? I don’t remember the specifics, but it was a connection that was made with the phone records. Maybe that’s the key to tying this all together.

  15. vtpackfan 06/13/2012 at 2:04 PM #

    Highstick, it was over NCSU gaining accreditation that caused the institution to through V down a well. Imagine what would happen if the greatest “Public Ivy” in mankind got threatened with the stripping of accreditation.

    Too many twists and turns to fathom any ultimate consequences. Where is Carnac the Magnifent when SFN needs him 🙂

  16. Texpack 06/13/2012 at 2:05 PM #

    The oozing sore that is the UNC-CH Athletics department is a long way from scabbing over. Even “Swahili Statistics” says that the data points under the asymptotic can’t outnumber those under the “normal” portion of the curve. Pretty soon it will be obvious to the masses that this is the case. The setting up the sham course after the program had been under investigation for over a year reveals just how comfortable they had become with doing this type of stuff. It was clearly SOP.

  17. vtpackfan 06/13/2012 at 2:08 PM #

    Highstick, it was over NCSU gaining accreditation that caused the institution to throw V down a well. Imagine what would happen if the greatest “Public Ivy” in mankind got threatened with the stripping of accreditation.

    Too many twists and turns to fathom any ultimate consequences. Where is Carnac the Magnifent when SFN needs him 🙂

  18. Wufpacker 06/13/2012 at 2:13 PM #

    ^ While very true, don’t forget that those rumblings started soon after the book came out and were based upon things alleged in the book which, like just about everything else, turned out to be fabricated.

    When academics turned out to not be an issue (after one of those independent investigation thingys), the lynch mob still didn’t relent and made a very public spectacle of it.

    Anyone who can’t see the glaring differences between now and then just doesn’t want to. You wanna talk about de-valuing of degrees? I still get comments from folks when they find out I went to State, despite the fact that it’s now been more than 20 years since NOTHING HAPPENED.

  19. tcthdi-tgsf-twhwtnc 06/13/2012 at 2:46 PM #

    This makes the NCAA look silly. Apparently their investigation didn’t find these classes or they didn’t care about them.

    I hope this scandal brings a larger investigation into the elitism that has taken over the North Carolina University System.

    No doubt there is much good about the state’s universities. However, the idea that our tax payers must keep up with other state’s tax payers to compete for the best students and faculty is an endless money trap.

    The nation’s campuses have been funded by student loans that have added up to a trillion dollars. The endless supply of free money has created a fake economy that pays (and pensions) professors, administrators and coaches, salaries that make no sense in a free market.

    Our public universities are becoming more 5 diamond resorts instead of tax-payer funded institutions of higher education.

  20. highstick 06/13/2012 at 5:14 PM #

    I’m not sure I blame the NCAA since their ability to force furnishing documents is limited(or that’s my perception). Heck, if we couldn’t get the 216 records which appear to be clearly under state law, how could they dig into all of the crap in the academic departments. The State of NC should be dealing with this including the 216 records, but the “lambs are very silent”..

    This makes Al Capone look like an amateur!

  21. TruthBKnown Returns 06/13/2012 at 5:18 PM #

    I thought a judge even ruled that the 216 phone records WERE a matter of public record. But no one has ever enforced Butch handing them over.

  22. highstick 06/13/2012 at 7:16 PM #

    “No one has ever” is the key…

  23. Master 06/13/2012 at 7:32 PM #

    There is a certain naivete among people about how things work at this institutional level. I can promise you with absolute 100% certainty that every lever of power is being used to contain, cover up and misdirect any adverse information in what has simply become too large to keep quiet.

    Whether it be titans of business, state political leaders, university officials, educational boards and trustees or media players on the local, state and national levels, there is an all out effort to keep this from going nuclear.

    There are too many careers, insider benefits and cozy social relationships that will end if this thing goes where we all think it can and should go. These people will not let this go quietly into the night.

  24. Tampa-Pack 06/13/2012 at 8:35 PM #

    Love that I’m getting the UNC MBA ad again on this post! The MBA program “you probably can’t get into.”. Probably true since I don’t have a rouge advisor or coach, or professor. Plus enrollment probably only opens a couple days before each session so there is a very small registration window. Cool thing is though its probably 93% athletes. They need something to do after Swahili.

  25. coppertop 06/13/2012 at 9:03 PM #

    Whatever happened with the loose connection that was made between Nyang’oro and Marvin’s “people”? I don’t remember the specifics, but it was a connection that was made with the phone records. Maybe that’s the key to tying this all together.

    I believe it was a world african store or non profit that had the same address as a family member of Marvin Austin’s or a coach or known associate that received donations at very *interesting* times.

    There is far too much smoke for there to be no fire at this point.

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