This from the
Hechinger report:
Last week, the pubic learned that over
18 years, more than 3,100 student-athletes at the University of North
Carolina took fake classes to satisfy academic requirements without significantly cutting into their work as athletes.
Advisers, counselors, faculty, coaches, and sometimes students
collaborated to set up these “phantom classes” where no one had to meet
or seriously have their assignments reviewed.
The numbers have been referred to the numbers as “surprising” and “shocking.” But are they really?
The UNC scandal is just one of many symptoms of the larger issue of
the National Collegiate Athletic Association exploiting
student-athletes.
The term “student-athlete” is an excellent window into the systemic
problems; it’s misleading and implies that these athletes lead normal
lives as students.
During an albeit satirical report from The Daily Show,
former Northwestern University football player Kain Colter explained
how the NCAA does not cover medical expenses needed for injuries
students received while playing for their schools. Colter went on to
talk about his schedule as a “student.”
The UNC scandal is just one of many
symptoms of the larger issue of the National Collegiate Athletic
Association exploiting student-athletes.
“We already have a full-time job,” said Colter. “We don’t have time to get a second job.”
“We are employees just like how the NFL players are employees,” he
continued later. “We spend 50-60 hours practicing in the off-season.”
Naturally, this means many athletes simply do not have time to focus
on their academics. In a way, they are professional football players
forced to masquerade as students so the universities and NCAA can
compensate them with scholarships rather than paying them an honest
wage.
Thus, colleges have a motivation to help students cheat and set up
fake classes. Their administrations want the athletes to have the
bare-minimum grades so they can keep students in school and continue the
exploitation. However, they don’t want the students to properly earn
these grades if it means taking away too much time from the athletics
that bring in revenue for their school.
Helping students cheat is just one of many methods that educational
institutions use to maintain this status quo where students allow them
to rake in money without paying it back.
There are also some other disturbing implications in many of these
stories, especially the UNC scandal. In UNC’s case, it was the
African-American Studies department that set up the majority of these
bogus “paper classes.”
Furthermore, Michael McAdoo, a black former student at UNC, claimed
that he was pressured into majoring in African-American studies.
He goes on to say, “I lost an education. I lost trust in the school — someone I thought had my best interest.”
While cheating scandal of the extent of the situation at UNC may seem
shocking, the deeper issue of exploitation is simply unconscionable.
Joseph Rauch is a staff writer for the SkilledUp Learning Hub, a provider of online educational opportunities. He’s also written for the Huffington Post.
1 comment:
And this is supposed to be surprising to folks?
Universities argue that sports scholarships are a mechanism for increased diversity, but I am not sure why that goal has anything to do with sports. I suspect that if we took half the amount of money we spend on DI college athletics and instead simply handed out scholarships to minority members based upon their intellect instead of their athletic prowess, we could actually double post secondary diversity.
The athletes are correct - scholarship money is basically salary for athletic service to big U. I doubt you see this sort of academic falsification going on in division III where athletic programs comparatively run on a shoe string and players participate out of choice and not obligation.
Post a Comment