CNN analysis: Some college athletes play like adults, read like 5th-graders
By Sara GanimEarly in her career as a learning specialist, Mary Willingham was in her office when a basketball player at the University of North Carolina walked in looking for help with his classwork.
He couldn't read or write. "And I kind of panicked. What do
you do with that?" she said, recalling the meeting. Willingham's job was to help
athletes who weren't quite ready academically for the work required at UNC at Chapel Hill, one of the
country's top public universities.
But she was shocked that one
couldn't read. And then she found he was not an anomaly. Soon, she'd meet a
student-athlete who couldn't read multisyllabic words. She had to teach him to
sound out Wis-con-sin, as kids do in elementary school.
And then another came with this
request: "If I could teach him to read well enough so he could read about
himself in the news, because that was something really important to him,"
Willingham said. Student-athletes who can't read
well, but play in the money-making collegiate sports of football and basketball,
are not a new phenomenon, and they certainly aren't found only at UNC-Chapel
Hill.
A CNN investigation found public
universities across the country where many students in the basketball and
football programs could read only up to an eighth-grade level. The data obtained
through open records requests also showed a staggering achievement gap between
college athletes and their peers at the same institution.
This is not an exhaustive survey
of all universities with major sports programs; CNN chose a sampling of public
universities where open records laws apply. We sought data from a total of 37
institutions, of which 21 schools responded. The others denied our request for
entrance exam or aptitude test scores, some saying the information did not exist
and others citing privacy rules. Some simply did not provide it in time.
As a graduate student at
UNC-Greensboro, Willingham researched the reading levels of 183 UNC-Chapel Hill
athletes who played football or basketball from 2004 to 2012. She found that 60%
read between fourth- and eighth-grade levels. Between 8% and 10% read below a
third-grade level. "So what are the classes they
are going to take to get a degree here? You cannot come here with a third-,
fourth- or fifth-grade education and get a degree here," she said.
The issue was highlighted at UNC
two years ago with the exposure of a scandal where students, many of them
athletes, were given grades for classes they didn't attend, and where they did
nothing more than turn in a single paper. Last month, a North Carolina grand
jury indicted a professor at the center of the scandal on fraud charges. He's
accused of being paid $12,000 for a class he didn't teach.
When Willingham worked as a
learning specialist for athletes from 2003 to 2010, she admits she took part in
cheating, signing her name to forms that said she witnessed no NCAA rules
violations when in fact she did. But the NCAA, the college sports organizing
body, never interviewed her. Instead, it found no rules had been broken at
Chapel Hill. UNC now says 120 reforms put in
place ensure there are no academic transgressions.
But Willingham said fake classes
were just a symptom of the bigger problem of enrolling good athletes who didn't
have the reading skills to succeed at college. "Isn't it all cheating if I'm
sitting at a table with a kid who can't read or write at college level and
pulling a paper out of them? Is this really legitimate? No," Willingham told
CNN. "I wouldn't do that today with a college student; I only did it with
athletics, because it's necessary."
NCAA sports are big business, with millions of dollars at
stake for winning programs. In 2012, the University of
Louisville earned a profit of $26.9 million from its men's basketball program,
according to figures that schools have to file with the Department of Education
and were analyzed. That's about 60% more than the $16.9 million profit at the
University of North Carolina, whose men's hoops team had the second-largest
profit.
Willingham, now a graduation
adviser with access to student files, said she believes there are still athletes
at UNC who can't do the coursework. UNC Athletics Director Bubba
Cunningham said the school admits only students it believes can succeed. "I think our students have an
exceptional experience in the classroom as well as on the fields of
competition," he said.
Anecdotally, NCAA officials
admit there are probably stories that are troubling, but they also say the vast
majority of student-athletes compete at a high level in the classroom.
"Are there students coming to
college underprepared? Sure. They are not just student-athletes," said Kevin
Lennon, vice president of academic and membership affairs at the NCAA. But he said the NCAA sees it as
the responsibility of universities to decide what level athlete should be
admitted to their schools.
"Once the school admits them,
the school should do everything it can to make sure the student succeeds," he
said. "(Universities) don't want a national standard that says who they can
recruit and admit. They want those decisions with the president, provost and
athletic directors. That is the critical piece of all of this."
The NCAA admits that almost 30
athletes in sports that make revenue for schools were accepted in 2012 with very
low scores -- below 700 on the SAT composite, where the national average is
1000. That's a small percentage of about 5,700 revenue-sport athletes. However, the NCAA did not share
raw data. The U.S. Department of Education does not track statistics on the
topic, nor do the conferences.
In fact, only one
person in addition to Willingham who has ever collected data on the topic.
University of Oklahoma professor Gerald Gurney found that about 10% of
revenue-sport athletes there were reading below a fourth-grade level.
So, after consulting with
several academic experts, a public records requestswas sent and concluded that
what Willingham found at UNC and Gurney found at Oklahoma is also happening
elsewhere. The data collected is based
on the SAT and ACT entrance exam scores of athletes playing the revenue sports:
football and basketball.
In some cases, where that
information was not available, then asked for aptitude test scores
administered after the athlete was accepted by the university. Based on data from those
requests and dozens of interviews, a investigation revealed that most
schools have between 7% and 18% of revenue sport athletes who are reading at an
elementary school level. Some had even higher percentages of below-threshold
athletes. According to those academic
experts, the threshold for being college-literate is a score of 400 on the SAT
critical reading or writing test. On the ACT, that threshold is 16.
Many student-athletes scored in
the 200s and 300s on the SAT critical reading test -- a threshold that experts
told us was an elementary reading level and too low for college classes. The
lowest score possible on that part of the SAT is 200, and the national average
is 500.
On the ACT, we found some
students scoring in the single digits, when the highest possible score is 36 and
the national average is 20. In most cases, the team average ACT reading score
was in the high teens. "It is in many ways immoral for
the university to even admit that student," said Dr. Richard M. Southall,
director of the College Sport Research Institute and a professor at the
University of South Carolina.
Officials at the universities
from which CNN collected data all said they recognized the low scores -- and
gave several possible reasons for them:
-- Some athletes don't aim for
high scores when taking entrance exams, looking only to score high enough to
become NCAA eligible.
-- Many times, low scores are
indicators of learning disabilities.
-- Entrance exams are just one
factor taken into consideration when deciding whether to accept a
student-athlete.
The officials also said they
believe excellent tutoring and extra attention from academic support allows
these athletes to excel off the field as well as on, and many cited the high
graduation rates of athletes. Robert Stacey, dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington, said the
conversation should be about the achievement gap -- the difference between the
academic levels of the athletes and their nonathlete peers at the same
university.
"We know how to close the
achievement gap. It's just very expensive," he said. "A student who scored a 380
on his or her (SAT) critical reading is going to face tremendous challenges,
won't be able to compete the first year with a student who has a 650 or 700. But
with intensive tutoring -- and I'm not talking about cheating, I'm talking about
tutoring -- by the time they get to be juniors, they're competing. But it's a
very expensive process. It takes intensive work."
But some of the universities
from which data was sought didn't even have remedial classes for
student-athletes to attend. Athletes, many times, take the field before they
even get to a classroom. And even if, over time, they can be brought up to
speed, how are they getting through the first few semesters?
We found one plausible
explanation at Iowa State -- where the achievement gap between students and
student-athletes was fairly low. There, any athlete who is
specially admitted -- they would not have gotten in on academics alone -- is
mandated to start school in the summer term, where they are given
remediation.
Tom Hill, senior vice president
for student affairs, said it's done partly because the school recognizes that it
is simply too much to ask athletes to jump into a tough schedule of practice and
games, plus keep up classwork, especially if they are already academically
behind. "We'll provide them with support
and help to begin the process to shore up deficiencies," Hill said. "It's not
just throwing them in there."
Hill also said that Iowa State
-- a land-grant university that takes many students from small, rural towns
across the state -- doesn't separate academic support for athletes from the rest
of the student population. Anyone can get the same tutoring as an athlete
does.
Hill, who has a long background
as an administrator in college athletics, said he is well aware of the practices
of pushing athletes through at more competitive schools. And he is blunt about
what he thinks of it. "Those people who do that should
be arrested," Hill said. "We should make it against the law. I know it happens.
I've spent time in athletics."
Former and current academic
advisers, tutors and professors say it's nearly impossible to jump from an
elementary to a college reading level while juggling a hectic schedule as an
NCAA athlete. They say the NCAA graduation rates are flawed because they don't
reflect when a student is being helped too much by academic support. "They're pushing them through,"
said Billy Hawkins, an associate professor and athlete mentor at the University
of Georgia.
"They're graduating them. UGA is
graduating No. 2 in the SEC, so they're able to graduate athletes, but have they
learned anything? Are they productive citizens now? That's a thing I worry
about. To get a degree is one thing, to be functional with that degree is
totally different."
Hawkins, who says in his 25
years at various universities he's witnessed some student-athletes fail to meet
college reading standards, added: "It's too much for students reading below a
college level. It's basically a farce."
Gurney, who looked into the
situation at the University of Oklahoma, put it bluntly: "College presidents
have put in jeopardy the academic credibility of their universities just so we
can have this entertainment industry. ... The NCAA continually wants to ignore
this fact, but they are admitting students who cannot read.
"College textbooks are written
at the ninth-grade level, so we are putting these elite athletes into classes
where they can't understand the textbooks. Imagine yourself sitting in a class
where nothing makes sense."
All of the university
representatives we talked to deny that their tutors do too much work for
student-athletes who come in at such low reading levels. "I lose sleep about a lot of
things; I don't lose sleep about writing tutors. We are extremely strict," said
Brian Davis, associate athletics director for football student services at the
University of Texas, acknowledging there were, of course, challenges.
"You have to minimize the risk
as much as you can. If you're signing 20 (recruits), you can't have 30 to 50%
extremely at risk. It puts way too much pressure on the system. That's when you
get into more nefarious issues, and I'm very proud of how we've addressed the
risk factors," Davis said.
There are anecdotes of student
athletes who do succeed. Christine Simatacolos, the associate athletics director
for student life at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, talks of a student
whose low scores fell below the college literacy threshold but who graduated
from Louisiana State University and is now in medical school.
But far more anecdotes of
failure were recounted during our monthlong research. Kadence Otto, who once taught at
Florida State University, recalled one situation where an academic support tutor
would call every week to check up on a starting player.
"I would say, 'He's not doing
well. He can't read and write.' And (the tutor) said, 'Well, we'll see what we
can do,'" Otto said. That stopped with a career-ending injury. "He's worth
nothing to the team, and I never once heard back from the academic support
adviser. He never showed up to class again, either." Otto, who now teaches at Western
Carolina University, says that experience had a big impact.
"That's one of the reasons I got
into working in corruption in college sports. Sending messages that maybe they
don't really care about the athletes as people," she said. And as for claims by
institutions that they can bring poor readers up to speed with tutoring, she
said: "Honestly, it feels to me it's like trying to turn a Little League
Baseball player into a pro."
Periodically since the 1980s,
stories have surfaced of athletes who could not read.
-- Former basketball player
Kevin Ross said "Outside the Lines" about his struggles at
Creighton University in the 1980s.
-- In 1989, football player
Dexter Manley told Congress that he got through college and into the pros
without ever learning to read.
-- Dasmine Cathey's compelling
story of struggle at the University of Memphis was recounted by The Chronicle of Higher Education in 2012.
And as far back as the 1980s,
faculty and staff have spoken up about illiterate athletes who are pushed
through with passing grades to keep up their eligibility to play, while their
reading was little addressed.
Linda Bensel-Meyers, who worked
for Tennessee until 2003, said a university-hired psychologist would diagnose
learning disabilities in athletes and put them in a program without the
graduation requirements set for other students. "Many of the records I looked at
revealed that these athletes came to us essentially illiterate and still left
the school functionally illiterate," Bensel-Meyers told CNN. When contacted, Tennessee
did not answer questions.
Then there was Brenda Monk. In
2009, the former Florida State University learning specialist said that she was forced to resign
from the university as a cheating scandal surfaced in which the NCAA said that
tutors were writing papers for athletes and giving them answers to test
scores.
Monk denied the allegation that
she did too much work for athletes, but she said she saw some of them reading at
second- and third-grade levels. The NCAA levied sanctions
against Florida State in 2009, including vacating wins and reduced
scholarships. Florida State did not provide records in response to our request.
In December, the Drake Group,
which pushes for academic integrity in collegiate sports, organized a lobbying
trip to Washington to push for an amendment to the College Education Act of
1965. Director Allen Sack said he wants to see a College Athlete Protection Act
-- legislation that would keep athletes on the bench as freshmen if they are
academically more than one standard deviation lower than the average student
admitted to the university.
"That's unconscionable, to bring
in a young athlete who does not fit in the general profile of the student body
and have them play football on national television before they've entered the
classroom for the first time in the fall," Sack said.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent of
Pennsylvania introduced legislation in the House last year that calls for a
complete overhaul of the NCAA. When he talked, he cited the lack of
consistency in the way recent NCAA investigations into various improprieties
were handled at Auburn, Florida State, Miami, North Carolina, Ohio State and
Penn State.
"I think (the NCAA) needs to be
looked at. I think they need to be reined in," Dent said. Mary Willingham went on the trip
to Washington and said she came back feeling that they could make some progress
in bringing change. Others aren't so confident that
a beast as big as collegiate athletics can be tamed.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.