North Carolina’s Academic Fraud Details: Forged Paperwork, “Little or No Instruction”
Details keep emerging about the University of North Carolina’s potential academic fraud for student athletes. The University is looking at 54 classes with “little or no instruction,” taken by 241 current or former student athletes, 46 involving retired African and Afro-American Studies professor Julius Nyang’oro. The details don’t look good for North Carolina.
Nyang’oro was quite the workaholic. As a department chairman, he purportedly taught 75 classes over four years, in addition to supervising 60 independent studies (22 by football players). Twenty-six of the 38 classes he purportedly taught during summer semesters were restricted enrollment, potentially to keep spaces open for student-athletes. Some were listed just before the start of the semester. Here is the example of one course, listed one year after the NCAA was already investigating North Carolina.
Records released last month showed that one class – AFAM 280 – was launched two days before the start of a summer 2011 semester and immediately filled with 18 football players and a former player. Academic advisers to the football players knew the class did not meet and only involved a term paper, but still placed the athletes in the classes.
The Charlotte Observer suggests the suspicious classes could go back further than is currently being investigated, dating back to 1999.
For example, Nyang’oro was listed as the professor for AFRI 066, Contemporary Africa, in the first summer semester of 2001. The class was not on the calendar as of April 4, but was on it seven weeks later as the semester got underway. It shows maximum seating for one student, though five enrolled, and lists no class time or classroom.
Multiple professors have denied teaching classes that had them listed as instructor, with evidence indicating their paperwork was forged.
He said a former department manager may have helped set up that class and others. Other professors linked to the Swahili class and eight others have disowned them, and the investigation has found their signatures were forged on course paperwork.
Awaiting the GameDay feature on North Carolina’s defense communicating audibles in Swahili. Fortunately, this is merely alleged academic fraud. No one fudged a summer job, sold an item that belonged to him or her or had an overly extravagant bagel.
Previously:Â North Carolina Investigating Potential Academic Fraud For Football and Basketball Players

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21 Responses to “North Carolina’s Academic Fraud Details: Forged Paperwork, “Little or No Instruction””
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July 9th, 2012 at 5:10 PM
The roar of national media attention to this is deafening.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:16 PM
i’m glad this long national nightmare was over before it started.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:17 PM
The roar of national media attention to this is deafening.
Hmmmm … I wonder why?
/I’m not gonna say it. You say it.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:20 PM
Because they suck at football
July 9th, 2012 at 5:22 PM
Because they suck at football
Ah sure, yeah, that’s it.
I’m outta here.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:27 PM
Wonderful backhanded slap at the NCAA. Reminds of when those fools punished the Univ of Utah, when Majerus took Keith Van Horn to breakfast after his father died.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:31 PM
looks like a bunch of…
/sunglasses
…retard heels.
/YYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!
July 9th, 2012 at 5:38 PM
Question: if the professor is found to have been involved in academic fraud, what can they do it him now that he’s retired? Can they yank his pension?
July 9th, 2012 at 5:43 PM
Hmmmm … I wonder why?
Because the media and fans love North Carolina, and there’s no profit to be made in bashing them.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:47 PM
If Sandusky gets to keep his, I’m guessing Nyang’oro gets off scot-free.
July 9th, 2012 at 5:50 PM
Yep. All this cheating and all they have to show for it is… actually what do they have to show for it?
July 9th, 2012 at 5:51 PM
Sandusky gets to keep his because the state of Pennsylvania does not have any written rule that states that a convicted felon cannot receive their state pension (an oversight which I imagine will attract some attention fairly soon, if it has not already, in Harrisburg).
I’d have to imagine, or maybe I’d have to hope, that North Carolina has something in its pension laws which says that state employees violate it if they something to light about their job performance, even if it was years later.
July 9th, 2012 at 6:14 PM
“I feed them, clothe them, give them a roof over their heads and now I have to educate my serfs?”
/Russia I thought this was
July 9th, 2012 at 7:04 PM
Yah they may suck at football but not at basketball. And this academic fraud reaches deeply into the basketball program. Some banners are about to come down in the Nose Dome.
July 9th, 2012 at 7:23 PM
What is not reported in this summary, but was included in Sunday’s feature article in the Raleigh News & Observer, is that the professor reportedly taught roughly 29 of those “bogus” summer school classes without getting paid. This means he set up the courses and rigged the system to only let in athletes. No class ever met and the athletes got the grade to maintain eligibility. No one is buying that the man did all of this (took the risk) out of the goodness of his heart. Somebody PAID this man under the table – thus the SBI’s involvement. When it comes out that Tar Heel boosters where padding this man’s bank account AND that school administrators were turning a blind eye to all of this for YEARS we’ll have a scandle of the first order. We already do but the national media has been slow to seize upon it b/c UNC sucks in football. With the growing evidence as titilating as it appears, however, more reporters are going to lock on to this story. Academic fraud at this level goes to the heart of a universities purpose, especially one that tells the world how great and pristine they are the way UNC does. Now we know how their athletic grad rates have been so ridiculously high all these years.
July 9th, 2012 at 9:19 PM
So… no one shares my opinion I guess… meaning …
A. I’m racist
B. The media is not leaning left
3. No one really cares to hear the dirty little secret.
July 9th, 2012 at 9:41 PM
Good comment backnine.
July 9th, 2012 at 9:44 PM
Just out with it already sqwauk
July 9th, 2012 at 9:45 PM
Good compliment script
July 9th, 2012 at 10:02 PM
What squawkbox is getting at is the department where this fraud took place. His is an opinion that has indeed been expressed and with good reason. It’s likely very much on target. National news outlets are scared to touch this story with too much zeal because of that department and more specifically which students were enrolled there – almost exclusively. Reporting on this story means opening a potential can of “politically incorrect worms” that news outlets are unsure how to treat. As such they are ignoring what would otherwise be a massive story on institutional corruption at one of America’s premier public institutions. But somewhere out there is an ambitious young journalist who is going to blow the lid off this story – and its a WHALE! No news outlet in the state of North Carolina has touched it either, with the exception of Dan Kane of the Raleigh News & Observer who has done an incredible job of bringing much of it to light – by himself. His front page, above the crease expose, in yesterday’s News & Observer was excellent and most suspect he’s sitting on yet more explosive info yet to be revealed. UNC is stonewalling hard and have so far received some cover from their journalistic friends (alumni) in many of the state’s other news outlets and TV stations. But there are now too many cracks in the dam to keep this hidden from the national spotlight. Sorry for the long post.
July 10th, 2012 at 6:17 AM
I think in the light of this the University of Northern California should get the rights to UNC! The California v Carolina war opens up a new front!