
UNC CH athletes who can't read
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
I may be mistaken, however, in reality he probably has enough money to never need a job. Then again, like so many of the "rich thugs" of the past, there is a chance he will eventually destroy himself anyway. Man, how the hell did we get to the point on this thread of discussing JB? 

- Maddog1956
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
No football?WataugaMan wrote:I may be mistaken, however, in reality he probably has enough money to never need a job. Then again, like so many of the "rich thugs" of the past, there is a chance he will eventually destroy himself anyway. Man, how the hell did we get to the point on this thread of discussing JB?

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- appst89
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
If I misinterpreted your later implications then I certainly apologize. Reading them again, I can see that they may have been general comments and not directed specifically at me.Maddog1956 wrote:appst89 wrote:I'm fine with disagreeing, but still waiting for the retraction of the accusation that I called him a thug. Haven't seen that yet.Maddog1956 wrote:We can agree to disagree.appst89 wrote:
You're trying awfully hard to make my comments into something they're not and still saying I called him a thug when I didn't. I'm sorry, but I simply won't allow you to do that. In the interest of saving space, I'm just going to say that I stick by everything I said based on my personal experience.I didn't said you called him one if you read the above quote I said if you work with violent criminals you should know better than to call him one. I was giving you the benefit of doubt that you wasn't calling him one.Maddog1956 wrote:I don't know what work you do but unless they are violent criminals they're not "thug" according to the proper definition, if you do work with violent criminals you should know better than to apply "thug" to someone that isn't (Sherman doesn't have a criminal record, so clearly not a "thug").
So I think it's your turn for the retraction.
Seems a pretty clear distinction to me, but I can't make it for you.I'm still trying to figure out how you can call someone "thug-like" without implying they're a "thug" however.
- appdaze
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/28/us/ncaa-a ... ?hpt=hp_t2
"The University of North Carolina failed some of its students "for years" by allowing them to take classes that did not match its own academic standards, Chancellor Carol Folt has admitted."
and finally they admit it
"The University of North Carolina failed some of its students "for years" by allowing them to take classes that did not match its own academic standards, Chancellor Carol Folt has admitted."
and finally they admit it
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
- BeauFoster
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
No, the schools failed when they began to allow sports to become bigger and more important than the mission of the institution. UNC never had to travel that path, and according to Dean-o, they never did. They always did things "the right way". You won't admit it, because your blood runs sky blue, but it's the truth. If UNC cared about education as much as their alumni, fans and staff say they do, they would get out of the business of sports if they can't do things the real right way. That won't happen.AppGrad1 wrote:bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
Give 'em hell!
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
The Carolina Way=500 unauthorized grade changes and 200 no show classes....BeauFoster wrote:No, the schools failed when they began to allow sports to become bigger and more important than the mission of the institution. UNC never had to travel that path, and according to Dean-o, they never did. They always did things "the right way". You won't admit it, because your blood runs sky blue, but it's the truth. If UNC cared about education as much as their alumni, fans and staff say they do, they would get out of the business of sports if they can't do things the real right way. That won't happen.AppGrad1 wrote:bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
"I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy"
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
I don't mean to split hairs but they failed us but not their own mission. Their main mission was not to educate a team but to win games. They were willing to educate those that wanted it but they were not about to force the issue. If you can play we will keep you eligible. The real solution is to have a policy that if you can't get in as a student then you can't get in as an athlete.BeauFoster wrote:No, the schools failed when they began to allow sports to become bigger and more important than the mission of the institution. UNC never had to travel that path, and according to Dean-o, they never did. They always did things "the right way". You won't admit it, because your blood runs sky blue, but it's the truth. If UNC cared about education as much as their alumni, fans and staff say they do, they would get out of the business of sports if they can't do things the real right way. That won't happen.AppGrad1 wrote:bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
The same should go for those schools who supposedly play non-scholarship sports but find some way to award academic scholarships to athletes.bcoach wrote:I don't mean to split hairs but they failed us but not their own mission. Their main mission was not to educate a team but to win games. They were willing to educate those that wanted it but they were not about to force the issue. If you can play we will keep you eligible. The real solution is to have a policy that if you can't get in as a student then you can't get in as an athlete.BeauFoster wrote:No, the schools failed when they began to allow sports to become bigger and more important than the mission of the institution. UNC never had to travel that path, and according to Dean-o, they never did. They always did things "the right way". You won't admit it, because your blood runs sky blue, but it's the truth. If UNC cared about education as much as their alumni, fans and staff say they do, they would get out of the business of sports if they can't do things the real right way. That won't happen.AppGrad1 wrote:bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
a.k.a JC0429
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
I will tell you this though. UNC may be the worst but does not have a lock on idiotic classes.JCline0429 wrote:The same should go for those schools who supposedly play non-scholarship sports but find some way to award academic scholarships to athletes.bcoach wrote:I don't mean to split hairs but they failed us but not their own mission. Their main mission was not to educate a team but to win games. They were willing to educate those that wanted it but they were not about to force the issue. If you can play we will keep you eligible. The real solution is to have a policy that if you can't get in as a student then you can't get in as an athlete.BeauFoster wrote:No, the schools failed when they began to allow sports to become bigger and more important than the mission of the institution. UNC never had to travel that path, and according to Dean-o, they never did. They always did things "the right way". You won't admit it, because your blood runs sky blue, but it's the truth. If UNC cared about education as much as their alumni, fans and staff say they do, they would get out of the business of sports if they can't do things the real right way. That won't happen.AppGrad1 wrote:bcoach wrote:Actually they did not fail in their intended mission. They brought these people in to play sports not to educate them. The players who take those courses came to play sports not get an education so there was no failure in either of their missions. There may have been a failure in the publics mission but not theirs.
Agreed. These athletes came to play sports for the most part not to get an education.
Take any football team in America and I'd bet a huge majority would not get into that school by credentials only.
The system has failed not the individual schools...
Beyonce is one of the world's most scrutinized pop stars, and now that study is moving to academia.
The Department of Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers University is offering a course called "Politicizing Beyonce."
Kevin Allred, a doctoral student who is teaching the class, tells the university's online news site that he is using Beyonce's career as a way to explore American race, gender and sexual politics.
The class supplements an analysis of Beyonce's videos and lyrics with readings from Black feminists. Allred says he's seeking to help students think more critically about media consumption.
Rutgers also has a class examining the theology of Bruce Springsteen's lyrics.
Georgetown University has a class called "The Sociology of Hip-Hop: The Urban Theodicy of Jay-Z," focusing on Beyoncé's rapper husband.
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
^^UNC's problem is not idiotic classes. Every school has its share of idiotic classes and easy majors, but you still have to go to class and do the work. At UNC there were paper classes that athletes enrolled in but they didn't have to go to class or do the work but they received A's and B's so that they could keep their gpa's up and remain eligible. According to the "Martin Review" there were 500 unauthorized grade changes and 200 no show classes.
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
Today's Winston-Salem JOURNAL ran an editorial which essentially boils this "can't read" scandal down to one simple question that UNC Chancellor Carol Folt must answer...
http://www.journalnow.com/opinion/edito ... f6878.html
http://www.journalnow.com/opinion/edito ... f6878.html
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
I agree with what you are saying about UNC. Just to clarify, UNC and all other schools need to get rid of these idiotic classes at a time when funds for what should be real education are being cut.Longrifle28 wrote:^^UNC's problem is not idiotic classes. Every school has its share of idiotic classes and easy majors, but you still have to go to class and do the work. At UNC there were paper classes that athletes enrolled in but they didn't have to go to class or do the work but they received A's and B's so that they could keep their gpa's up and remain eligible. According to the "Martin Review" there were 500 unauthorized grade changes and 200 no show classes.
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
OK - here's a very basic question - if some can't read or read at a level to succeed in college, how do they make the scores on the SAT/ACT to qualify? - and does that open up another HUGE can of worms??? ---asu66 wrote:Today's Winston-Salem JOURNAL ran an editorial which essentially boils this "can't read" scandal down to one simple question that UNC Chancellor Carol Folt must answer...
http://www.journalnow.com/opinion/edito ... f6878.html
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Re: UNC CH athletes who can't read
I believe that would be a yes.WVAPPeer wrote:OK - here's a very basic question - if some can't read or read at a level to succeed in college, how do they make the scores on the SAT/ACT to qualify? - and does that open up another HUGE can of worms??? ---asu66 wrote:Today's Winston-Salem JOURNAL ran an editorial which essentially boils this "can't read" scandal down to one simple question that UNC Chancellor Carol Folt must answer...
http://www.journalnow.com/opinion/edito ... f6878.html