Ivory towers have a long history of academic cheating
Anyone shocked to read of today’s Ivy League college cheating scandal hasn’t been paying attention. Beyond admissions bribery, there has been widespread exam cheating and test score manipulation at the University of Virginia in 2001; the U.S. Naval Academy in 1994; the University of Maryland in 2004 and Duke in 2007.
Cheating on tests was news at Harvard in 2012 and Dartmouth in 2015. The record shows grade inflation (usually from parents pressuring or persuading instructors) crept grade averages up from the range of 2.7 to 3.0 in 1950 to highs of 3.3 to 3.7 by 2012 at Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Cornell, Harvard, Princeton, Pennsylvania and Yale.
Amazingly, it seems the elite aura associated with these schools has gone unblemished. Collectively, the offenses suggest many of them may as well simply sell diplomas to the highest bidders. And to think, as the SunTimes editorial mentions, there have been lawsuits challenging a handful of affirmative action admissions meant to try to correct historical wrongs (“Editorial: Felicity Huffman, William H. Macy and a shameless college admissions scam” — Wednesday).
In all, this track record of cheating at all levels at these vaunted institutions questions and mars their integrity, and puts their degrees under a cloud of suspicion among thinking would-be employers considering hiring their graduates vs. graduates from other less prestigious but rigorous schools untainted by such scandal.
Ted Z. Manuel, Hyde Park