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re: UNC Admits Academic Fraud: Lack Of Institutional Controls, *NCAA Issues 3rd NOA

Posted on 3/1/15 at 10:52 pm to
Posted by CockInYourEar
Charlotte
Member since Sep 2012
22458 posts
Posted on 3/1/15 at 10:52 pm to
I'm just gonna leave this here.....

quote:

Pete: He had a good GPA, it's not like he was a bad student. That test was just too much.

That test was the SAT, and it proved to be a fiend. During the spring of his senior year, Waddell spent two hours a day, three days per week studying to try and make the requisite score that would make him eligible to play at Carolina as a freshman. He had the required GPA with plenty of room to spare. But the test, that standardized demon that has bedeviled many a high school student, would not be cracked.

Waddell wound up 10 points--one correct answer--short of the needed score. He had to enter UNC as a partial qualifier, which meant that he would be able to practice with the team during his freshman year, but not play in the games. It is the equivalent of a forced redshirt year. It also decreases a player's eligibility from four years to three years.




quote:

Michael Waddell has never even been close to being in academic trouble at the University of North Carolina. He hasn't served a suspension for cutting class, or needed a dramatic late-summer turnaround to get eligible for the fall. He has, with the help of the academic staff, been a model student.

"I really had a point to prove," says Waddell, who says his toughest class was biology. "There were a lot of people out there saying, 'He's a partial, he's not going to make it.' It bothered me, but I didn't pay any attention to it."

The former partial qualifier is on track to graduate at the end of his fourth year of college, which means that under NCAA guidelines he will earn back an extra year of eligibility. That's a nice gift, but it doesn't mean as much as something else he will earn in May--a college degree.
Posted by CockInYourEar
Charlotte
Member since Sep 2012
22458 posts
Posted on 3/6/15 at 7:31 am to
https://www.news-record.com/news/unc-employee-named-in-wainstein-report-resigns/article_0cb0e2da-c36d-11e4-8888-0fd436705b70.html

quote:

GREENSBORO — Another employee involved in the academic scandal at UNC-Chapel Hill has resigned.
Jeanette (Jan) Boxill submitted a letter for retirement on March 2, stating her retirement was effective Feb. 28, according to documents provided by the university. Boxill was a philosophy professor and one of the people named in the Kenneth Wainstein report.


quote:

Boxill was named in the report as helping point student athletes to the paper classes, and suggesting grades for some students.
Boxill was given notice by Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost James Dean Jr. that she would be fired on Oct. 22, the same day the Wainstein report was made public.

Boxill was appealing the termination until she announced her resignation, according to Rick White, associate vice chancellor for communications and public affairs for the university.

"Dr. Boxill has indicated her intent to seek retirement benefits based on her years of service as provided to state employees under North Carolina law," White said.


quote:

Boxill was one of four employees disciplined. Academic counselor Jaimie Lee was terminated and senior lecturer Timothy McMillan resigned, according to information provided by the university. Beth Bridger, who worked at UNC-Chapel Hill at the time of the paper classes, but was employed with UNC-Wilmington lost her job the day the report came out.
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