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. tuckerdorm1983 06/13/2012 at 10:20 PM #

    “La poisson pue, mon cher professeur”
    (the fish stinks my dear professor)

  2. packalum44 06/14/2012 at 2:18 AM #

    Keeping everyone in the tent pissing out works until someone decides to step outside and piss in. Need threat of criminal prosecution before the “game theory” kicks in.

  3. tuckerdorm1983 06/14/2012 at 7:05 AM #

    I like your analogy packalum44. I will remember that on my next camping trip.

  4. Pack78 06/14/2012 at 7:41 AM #

    This article does a pretty good job of cutting through the BS that still spews from unx:

    http://www.onthebanks.com/2012/6/13/3084148/the-shame-of-unc-football

  5. wilmwolf80 06/14/2012 at 8:13 AM #

    Not a bad article, but loses a lot of credibility coming from a Rutgers fan. Also, doesn’t really even include the latest revelations, nor does it make the connection to basketball. But anything keeping this in the news is good. Eventually all of the whispers will turn into a scream.

  6. tuckerdorm1983 06/14/2012 at 9:30 AM #

    Answer these questions

    1. Did you take Swahili from professor Julius Nyang’oro?
    2. Were you at one time an athlete at UNC?
    3. Was there mostly only football and basketball players in your class?
    4. Did you receive a good grade in the class?
    5. Can you tell me at least what language the following is below?

    kama hawajui nini lugha hii ni, basi ni makubwa ya mafuta kudanganya. Natumaini kuoza katika moto wa Jehanamu.

    use google translate to find out what this means in english from swahili

  7. Pack78 06/14/2012 at 9:40 AM #

    Long (but instructive) discourse from ProfessorWolf over at PP:

    “Couple of points… I call them colleagues because there are lot of folks over their I would call in a heartbeat if I thought they’d add something of value to one of my projects/grants. Folks tend to paint with broad strokes on this and other boards. Fact is, there are close to 3,000 people on the faculty over there. Not all march to the same beat of the drum. I have no doubt there are some that bend the rules academically. I have no doubt there are some that bend administrative rules (I’ve done that… not inviting the forensic accountants to my office, but there have been times when I’ve traveled to meet the deliverables of one grant but had to charge it to another source of funds. Other cases where I have used teaching’s photocopier for research purposes.. ohhh the horror! ). Now, before someone jumps on the significance of using the wrong copier relative to the orchestrating a cover-up… I know there is difference in the two.

    Let me get back to my point though… to say the entire faculty is scum, or they all are collaborators is just not honest. That would be like me saying everyone in the NC Department of Transportation is a criminal because there might be some shenanigans associated with how the ferry system runs. Broad strokes…

    My opinion, and my opinion only, because I’ve never surveyed the population… 80-90% (roughly 2400 to 2700) of their faculty don’t give a rat’s turd about athletics. I base that on the population I do know and interact with daily… those in my department and college. It is not honest of me to blame those in my department for the wrong in other departments when (A) they aren’t in that department and have no say in its mission/direction/etc, and (B) have no knowledge of that wrong doing. Now, if they learn of the issues, and don’t work to correct them through the proper channels, then yes, I can then question their integrity.

    Note I said proper channels. Public outcries, lynchings, and news editorials are not the proper channel. Yes, they excite the masses (of the rival team), but they are not productive. Productive is changing policy / procedure / checks-n-balances and ensuring those are then followed. I said the other day this is not about retribution, this is about fixing the problem. If you let Prof Kangaroo retire but don’t change the system that he manipulated, have you really solved anything? The firing is the easy part. The minutiae of the policies & procedures is the hard part. That will take years to fix there, just like it did here.

    In chapel hill, we are just now in, what I imagine will be, the early stages of serious “academic” issues coming to the surface. Before, the only data we had was one plagiarized paper, a piece of Fat Marv’s transcript, and unacceptable tutorial assistance provided to players. None of these cut to the core of academics. In my opinion, they were academic transgressions in an athletic program. NOW we have major academic issues, that just happen to involve athletes. See the difference there? Again, my opinion only, I’d be just as pissed about the latest academic issues if they involved only honors-students. I think that is why my “colleagues” are gathering their pitchforks. Now they are not only becoming informed, they are becoming enraged. I said last week, getting the story from the front page of the sports section to the front-page-above-the-fold of the N&O brought this bigger issue to the attention of the 80-90% that weren’t paying attention.

    Changes will be made. I’ve been saying for almost two years now, the real damage will be done from within. The NCAA can vacate wins, impose bowl penalties, etc. But those have little affect. Vacated win or not, the Citadel still got their butts kicked 40-6 in 2009. What I think will happen is there will be a long-term crackdown on academics that will result in more-student-less-athlete being in the unc student athlete of the future. By 2015/16, the Citadel will have a chance. I think it will take that long… but I think the effect will last longer than a one year public shaming of a bowl ban. There will be no way to implement these university wide policies without affecting all students…including the athletes that play in venues other than Kenum Stagum (thank you Coach Hat for that parking lot rant caught on video).

    Again… all of the above is the opinion of a middle-aged pointy head. Time will tell how much of it comes to pass. 10 years from now, I think history will have been kind to the Pack fans. Guess we will need LittleZZ to do an analysis using the wayback machine…”

  8. tuckerdorm1983 06/14/2012 at 9:52 AM #

    wewe ni haki pack78. Nakubaliana na wewe.

  9. tuckerdorm1983 06/14/2012 at 9:56 AM #

    I would love to sit down with every unc football player and basketball player that took Kanagroo’s course and ask them about my last post. I bet 99 percent would not have a clue what language that is. I would not even dare ask what was actually being said!!!

  10. Pack78 06/14/2012 at 10:13 AM #

    ^^Natumaini kuwa profesa ni sahihi.

  11. highstick 06/14/2012 at 2:20 PM #

    LOL Pack78…We all speak Swahili now!!

  12. Packfan28 06/14/2012 at 2:45 PM #

    Damn, I haven’t even learned Cowdog yet, and now your throwing in Swahili. This site is getting way too complicated for me.

  13. tuckerdorm1983 06/14/2012 at 3:07 PM #

    Kwenda kuzimu Carolina

  14. Pack78 06/14/2012 at 4:45 PM #

    ^’Kwenda kuzimu Carolina, Devils and Deacons stand in line, the Red and White from N C State-Go State!’

  15. highstick 06/14/2012 at 7:59 PM #

    Have you guys seen “Lion King”?? Did that from the 3rd row…

  16. lawful 06/14/2012 at 10:08 PM #

    Isn’t it ironic that Debbie Crowder won’t talk? I’m sure it’s just coincidence that she doesn’t want to clear her own name. I’m sure she has no time for such folly. Wasn’t there someone else there that followed the same path? Probably another coincidence. I’m sure they weren’t bought off or anything. Then again, if you’re going to attempt to cover up a scandal, you might as well go the whole nine yards.

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