Los Angeles Times gets headline right, the story wrong
The deep story lies in what characterizes higher education today and how, through suspect achievement tests like the SAT and ACT, and inflated grades, students arrive on campus to be funneled through to graduating a specialist without the liberal (meaning broad and deep) educational background their predecessors from 1900 through 1970 experienced. The SAT and ACT alone favor parents wealthy enough to spend from $500 (bare minimum) to $5-8,000 and more on test preparers who will use workable strategies to boost test scores, not I.Q. or aptitude, test scores, and it’s all legal if grotesquely unfair to the majority of poor to middle class students--the MAJORITY of students! In Colombia students are rising up
“...calling for the recognition of higher education as a universal, inalienable right, for greater autonomy and self-government for students, professors, and administrators and for the production of scientific, humanistic, and artistic knowledge, with the aim of overcoming the legacy of decades of violent conflict and reducing aberrant levels of inequality.” Perhaps American higher education should set such a standard rather than producing a nation of student debtors worthy of a novel by Charles Dickens.
With regard to the universities caught up in the latest scandal: USC, UCLA, Stanford, Yale, and several more, they were easily duped, just as most large institutions would be. Notice that these schools are, with exception, all private universities. Also appreciate that each thus far has identified solely department malefactor/criminals guilty of participating in racketeering. Recently, a sports writer for the Los Angeles Times, Dylan Hernandez, in an expansive mood described the actions of a few USC athletic department members as showing the “depths of the school’s decline.” The University of Southern California is hardly in decline notwithstanding the criminality of two wanton physicians and rogue coaches and families. In the #MeToo era we have learned that misogyny riddles the whole culture, rich to poor, irrespective of race, that cheating characterizes too great a portion of collegiate and professional operations.
A handful of super rich malefactors involved in a legitimate racketeering operation is a juicy “social impact” story but hardly qualifies as a having a major impact nationally given the inequities characterizing SAT and ACT test preparation described above, truly a pay-to-play exercise that favors the upper middle classes to the rich, for it is they who can afford to pay test preparers and testing coaches the thousands of dollars necessary to raise the scores of beneficiaries enough to qualify for entrance to university.
More on USC, some wish to lay all the blame on athletic director Lynn Swann on up to the President of the University, an interim president. None of the higher ups in this case, nor on the others, Mike Garrett, Pat Haden, in past and recent past should be singled out. In this case a top Athletic Department administrator, Donna Heinel, operated from the "top" down including water polo coach Jovan Vavic who apparently was funneling cash to assistant coaches who possibly were not paid well enough. Nevertheless, Vavic produced 16 championships between women's and men's water polo--16! This is surely one of the great NCAA feats of all time in any sport. He did it with help. How much did he take personally, not yet known. As for Reggie Bush, that's on the Bush family and Reggie. This writer never liked Pete Carroll's libertine approach to discipline even as he can appreciate Carrol’s abilities. One shouldn’t lay the Bush fiasco on Carroll and his staff. Then there's Tony Bland who worked with a member of De'Anthony Melton's family unbeknownst to USC basketball coach Andy Enfield.
At some point trust is the only quality you have to work with in an open, pleasant, productive working environment. You must be able to trust all members of the team, including sports administration, parents, assistant coaches, athletes, matriculators (we suppose the rich ones particularly). An over reaction which now riddles American culture might produce a Draconian reaction which dampens esprit de'corps and may stifle the kind of healthy internal environment that makes the whole thing work well.










