The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will not lose accreditation over the academic fraud that occurred there, but it will face one year of probation, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges announced Thursday. In October, the university released a detailed report about widespread and long-lasting academic fraud at the university. For 20 years, some employees at the university knowingly steered about 1,500 athletes toward no-show courses that never met and were not taught by any faculty members, and in which the only work required was a single research paper that received a high grade no matter the content.Penguin wrote:The NCAA found Carolina to have violated a sum total of ZERO bylaws. ZERO, you know, the number of times that dook has beaten Carolina this year. And Carolina doesn't have to have their athletic department hire strippers for their athletes to rape at will. Keep on digging, you will never get out of that hole now, making it deeper only allows me to enjoy more popcorn while laughing at you.
In January, UNC submitted a 200-page report to the accrediting body detailing the steps it has taken since the scandal came to light. The university will have to submit a similar update after the probationary period
Yall did it you just didnt get punished for it.by the NCAA which is a joke .its making money off of college players backs .the should receive a stipend .NCAA is not going to damage its cash cow.