By Professor
Doom
It really seems worthwhile to talk about
the kind of effort UNC is still putting into covering up their “paper classes”
scandal, and how accreditation in general operates when confronted with open,
overwhelming, systemic, fraud.
Accreditors only hear what administration at the institution tells them,
and never look to see with their own eyes what’s really going on. Owen was an
administrator at UNC, knew there was fraud going on, but still reported to
accreditation that all was hunky-dory at UNC.
It’s critical to understand this: accreditation never looks at the
institution in an honest way. Instead, administrators at the institution look
at their own institution, and then tell the accreditor their own institution is
legitimate. This is why long-running frauds are at many of our institutions of
higher education, despite them all being “fully accredited.”
Of course, Owen has her name on the reports certifying the paper courses
were legitimate, so I bet people want to ask her questions.
Owen told the Wainstein team she did not remember such a
meeting or concerns about the number of independent studies in AFAM, the report
said.”
“Owen’s “inexplicable decision” not to press the issue about
the independent studies allowed the paper class scheme to go on for five more
years, the report said.
Ah, the ol’ “I can’t remember” defense. It works well when nobody really
wants to know the truth. I guess it’s possible she thought of that herself, but
gentle reader, please don’t rule out the possibility that she’s receiving
orders from above. Still, despite her claimed senility, I’m thinking some folks
might want to ask some more questions of her:
A UNC-CH spokewoman said Owen is on “Senior Faculty Research
and Scholarly Leave” during this semester. The competitive paid leave was
awarded in January and is covered by various endowed funds, according to a
UNC-CH website. Owen’s current annual salary is $138,669.
Heh. She can’t answer questions now, she’s
on paid leave. How convenient.
Wow, it sure was lucky of Owen for
administration to award her a fat, “competitive” leave just when she was needed
to answer questions. Competitive…that means a committee looked at Owen, with
the multimillion dollar fraud cloud hanging over her head and admission of
senility, looked at all the other faculty that wanted that leave, and decided
that Owen, despite the real possibility of long running fraud and her
willingness to admit to senility, and said “Senior Associate Dean Owen is
better than literally every other faculty member on campus.”
Geez, UNC is acknowledging their faculty
are pretty terrible in general, that they all rate below a possible fraudster
with admitted issues of senility. I bet the other faculty are thrilled that,
once again, UNC administrators are willing to throw academics under a bus just
to protect themselves.
Owen gets nigh 140k a year for her
“work”, or at least for being on leave. I wish I could get that kind of money
for being on leave. I wish I could get that kind of money for doing my job! Not
doing my job, AND getting awarded a long leave? That’s golden…it must be
awesome being an administrator. Well, when there’s not a huge fraud scandal,
anyway.
Owen was a “senior associate dean” raking
in that loot—keep in mind there are levels and levels of deanlings above her, making
even more with every level. Despite this, Owen did quite a bit of the
administrative work at UNC:
“She has been a key figure in assembling reports for
UNC-CH’s accreditation requirements for years.
In 2005, she headed up the university’s Quality Enhancement
Plan required for 10-year accreditation review by SACS. In a 2004 story
published by the University Gazette, an employee newspaper, Owen discussed the
importance of accreditation reviews: “It provides the chance to review all the
documents and guidelines surrounding the academic programs to confirm we are
doing what we are saying we are doing regarding degree programs as well as to
look at an area in depth.”
Ah the QEP. I’ve written of this laughably stupid
make-work accreditation requirement only lightly before. Because accreditation is run both
by and for college administrators, it has completely abandoned any pretense of
having anything to do with education. Instead, it’s mostly about make-work
projects for administration. The administrators at the top aren’t real big on
work, so they hire more administrators below them to do the work…which hire
more administrators below them to do the work.
So it is that a 10 year project for
accreditation, one that affects the entire institution and every student there,
is run not by the Poo-Bah, not by a vice-Poo-Bah, not by a Chancellor, or by a
Provost, or even by a Dean or even an assistant to the Dean. Instead, it’s run
by a senior associate dean.
And this project has absolutely nothing to
do with education, or anything any student or faculty cares about.
Seriously, there are way too many
administrators in higher education today.
Do note that neither President Rosenberg
nor the other 25 Poo-Bahs thought there should be some administrative firings
over this fraud. Instead, a ridiculously highly paid senior associate
sub-administrator gets awarded glorious paid leave, coincidentally leaving that
person unavailable for further questioning.
Hmm. How is it, exactly, that “paid leave”
prevents a person from answering a phone? Am I really alone in finding this
excuse inexcusable? We’re talking millions of dollars of fraud here, at the
bare minimum…answering the damn phone seems reasonable to me, even if you’re on
leave. Does UNC know about cell phones?
Am I alone in thinking accreditation is
being a little too precious with accepting this excuse for not being able to
ask this deanling some questions?
Integrity
is a core principle of the accreditation agency, and any review in higher
education is based on trust, said Andrew Westmoreland, chairman of the SACS
Commission on Colleges and president of Samford University in Alabama.
I really can’t emphasize enough how the
massive conflict of interests in having the same people that run accreditation
being the same people that run our institutions has led to widespread fraud.
The Poo-Bah of Samford University is a Chairman of SACS? Am I really alone in
seeing a problem having Poo-Bah/accreditors? With Poo-Bahs and accreditors
being basically the same people, how is it a puzzle that Poo-Bahs can get away
with academic murder?
“This is certainly a unique case,” [Westmoreland] said.
“Frankly, all of us in higher education have been heartbroken as the full story
has emerged.”
Allow me to read between the lines here,
by taking what the Poo-Bah/accreditor says at face value. The
Poo-Bah/accreditor isn’t heartbroken about the fraud at UNC. He’s heartbroken
that the full extent of the fraud is now emerged into public knowledge.
Well, full extent of the this particular
fraud at one particular institution, at least. Across the country, institution
after institution is running similar frauds, and taking note that ultimately
nothing will be done even if the frauds are discovered. The Poo-Bah/accreditor
need not be too heartbroken, however. The entire system of accreditation has
been set up in such a way that it can easily take 18 years before even
widespread open fraud at any institution can be discovered. Most people don’t
come to this blog, and thus don’t realize the system is well-set to keep the
frauds at other institutions well hidden for a long, long time.
To add insult to injury, the tax dollars
stolen by such fraud is easily spent by the institutions on PR firms that help
to minimize the appearance of fraud. For example, UNC has already spent millions of
dollars on PR firms just for this one fraud. Hmm, administration at UNC had the choice of “integrity”
or “hire a PR firm”…too bad there’s no way to stop them from making the wrong
choice, eh? Integrity speaks for itself, after all, you don’t need a PR firm to
spin things if you’re being open and honest.
To add injury to the insult to the injury,
UNC actually offers a degree in Public Relations. By hiring an outside firm, UNC
is openly admitting that they don’t trust their own Public Relations faculty to
do the public relations, and would rather hire outsiders…do they fear the
faculty would insist on telling the truth? That’s just a guess on my part, but
a fair conclusion would be that a UNC Public Relations degree is worth about as
much as a UNC African Studies degree, and UNC administration knows it.
Am I really alone in seeing these
problems?
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