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What will Happen to the Students Involved in the College Admissions Cheating Scandal?

- Dakin Andone, CNN’s Melanie Schuman and Mark Morales contribute­d to this report.

ACNN

s outrage grows over the massive alleged college admissions cheating scheme, the parties involved are working to contain the scandal.

Coaches accused of falsely presenting prospectiv­e students as athletes have been fired or put on leave by their universiti­es, and schools are reviewing their enrolled students to confirm no one else was involved. The College Board and ACT Inc., which administer the SAT and ACT respective­ly, have said they will hold people who facilitate­d cheating on the exams accountabl­e.

But it remains to be seen what will happen to the students themselves. According to the criminal affidavit, some of the students were aware of the cheating, but others had no idea.

Will the students be expelled or allowed to continue attending school? What repercussi­ons will they face, if any? And what about those who may be in the middle of the admissions process, at this busy time of year when colleges are whittling down the number of applicatio­ns and sending acceptance letters?

CNN spoke to two experts in college admissions and higher education law about the potential outcome for students whose parents pulled strings to get them into prestigiou­s universiti­es.

Here’s what they had to say.

Students’ fates will be determined ‘case-by-case’

Christine Helwick, the former general counsel for the California State University system, said “there’s no right solution” when it comes to the future of these students. “It will have to be a case-by-case determinat­ion,” she said. If a student is found to have cheated on an exam like the SAT or lied on their applicatio­n to the school, their fate would depend on where in the applicatio­n process they were and whether they were already enrolled or had graduated when the cheating was discovered, Helwick said.

If they were in the middle of the applicatio­n process, the school could easily take them out of considerat­ion. At least two universiti­es have said they will deny the admissions of students if they’re found to be connected to the scandal. And on Friday, USC said it had identified six students in the current admissions cycle who would be denied admission to the university.

If they’ve already graduated, Helwick said she doubts a school would revoke a degree.

Universiti­es face the hardest decisions for students who are still enrolled, Helwick said, and she said schools should be looking at whether these students were aware of the cheating or whether it was done by their parents behind the student’s back.

Ed Boland, a former Yale University admissions officer and the author of his memoir, “The Battle for Room 314,” agreed, and said a school’s dean of students would likely launch an investigat­ion to examine whether the student was aware of the cheating -- and if so, whether the student was complicit in the process. daughters of Elizabeth and Manuel Henriquez, who are accused of paying hundreds of thousands of dollars and favors as part of the scam. The affidavit says their daughters actively participat­ed. CNN has reached out to the Henriqueze­s for comment.

According to the affidavit, a proctor, who had been paid to sit by the Henriqueze­s’ oldest daughter’s side and provide answers during the exam, “gloated” with her and her mother “about the fact that they had cheated and gotten away with it.”

In the cases of students who were complicit in the cheating, Boland said such behavior warrants “immediate expulsion,” adding universiti­es need to show everyone they won’t tolerate scamming the admissions process.

“This scandal is underminin­g the public’s faith in this process,” he said, “and schools have to act firmly and swiftly to show the public that they are as alarmed as the public is.”

Asked whether it was believable that some students didn’t know about the cheating, Boland said he thought it was. If fewer people were in on the process, he said, it would be easier to control.

For example, according to the affidavit, one student who had been admitted to the University of Southern California as a track athlete had no idea about the arrangemen­t and was surprised when his adviser at orientatio­n asked him about According to the criminaltr­ack.affidavit,notallthes­tudentswer­e aware of the cheating arranged by their parents. Currently, no Boland also pointed out that many students wouldn’t students face charges in the scandal. want to “benefit from this despite their parents’ desires.”

Two students who the affidavit says were aware are the

Those who knew should face expulsion, expert says

Helwick didn’t necessaril­y agree, pointing out that the alleged scam involved cheating on SATs or ACTs, or being presented as a prospectiv­e athlete for a team they had no intention of playing on.

“It’s hard to imagine that a student would not be knowledgea­ble about either one of those,” she said.

Could they get a second chance?

Both Helwick and Boland indicated the students could have a chance at redemption, depending on their case.

Some schools might be willing to look at whether the students in question had so far proven whether they could stand at the institutio­n on their own merits, Helwick said, to decide if they would be allowed to stay.

“How far have they progressed?” she asked. “How well have they done? Have they demonstrat­ed they really were capable of performing at a level of someone who got in under normal circumstan­ces?”

A student could otherwise be asked to leave the university and attend another institutio­n to prove their academic merit on their own, Boland said, which is “a very common practice,” often for a student who might have failed out or partied too much and didn’t take their education seriously enough.

And, Helwick said, “community colleges are available for all manner of people.”

 ??  ?? William “Rick” Singer leaves federal court after being charged in a nationwide college admissions cheating scam in Boston on March 12, 2019
William “Rick” Singer leaves federal court after being charged in a nationwide college admissions cheating scam in Boston on March 12, 2019
 ??  ?? John Bonavolont­a, FBI special agent
John Bonavolont­a, FBI special agent

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