As with most viral stories, this one included a killer image: a camera shot of a 146-word, grammar-challenged final “essay” on Rosa Parks that, it seemed, had earned one lucky jock an A The NCAA will not sanction UNC after an academic scandal — here's how a student-athlete got an A-minus with a one-paragraph final essay. 146-word "final paper" on Rosa Parks. The student The paper went viral as the Internet reacted to how simple the short essay on Rosa Parks was. But it turns out the paper was actually plagiarized. A reader sent along a photo of the first page of a children's book called " Rosa Parks: My Story ," by Parks and Jim Haskins. The entire essay reads as follows: Rosa Parks: My Story She claims that of 183 football or basketball players at UNC from 2004-12, 60 percent were reading at fourth- to eighth-grade levels. The paper is about Rosa Parks and according to the video and the screen grab, it received an A-. Whistleblower says UNC put athletes in classes that never met and required only one final paper During an interview with ESPN, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill whistleblower Mary Willingham, who tutored and advised student athletes at the school for a decade, revealed a 146-word "essay" that earned one athlete an A-. Aside from being incredibly short, the paper, written about Rosa Parks, is filled with grammatical errors. A UNC Athlete Got An A-Minus In A Fake 'Paper Class' With This Ridiculous One-Paragraph Final Essay. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill offered "paper classes paper" on Rosa Parks. A final exam that a North Carolina student-athlete turned in for an African-American studies class was a 148-word paragraph that was a close approximation of the first page of "Rosa Parks: My Story" and received an A-minus grade. The 148-word Rosa Parks essay has also become a potent symbol in the growing scandal over NCAA athletes being passed along in cake college courses to keep them on the basketball court or football The one-paragraph essay on civil rights icon Rosa Parks earned an A- and was exposed by former UNC professor Mary Willingham, who spent 10 years teaching UNC's athletes before she turned The essay reads: On the evening of December Rosa Parks decided that she was going to sit in the white people section on the bus in Montgomery, Alabama. During this time blacks had to give up there seats to whites when more whites got on the bus. Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat. Pressley, currently studying abroad in Scotland, took to his personal blog to speak out on the essay, the business of college sports, and more. We'd encourage anyone who saw the essay floating around social media to hear what Pressley has to say about it (quoted directly from his own posting): More in depth coverage of this at Slate.com.. I recommend reading the whole article but: "Online commenters have noted that AFAM 41—the class name listed at the top of the essay—was a legitimate intro course in the African American studies department and would have required more than a single-paragraph essay to complete. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. It was the Rosa Parks essay. If you’re one of the partisans—defensive or gleeful—who consumed every bit of spew from the scandal concerning sham classes at Chapel Hill over the last five A former professor at the University of North Carolina has brought forward a blunt example of how the college sped big-name athletes with subpar grades to the goal line of graduation, despite A segment by ESPN's Outside the Lines from March 25, 2014 [43] drew attention because Willingham showed a 146-word essay about Rosa Parks and claimed that an unnamed student-athlete at UNC earned an A-minus in an AFAM class for turning that essay in. News. Today's news; US; Politics; World; Tech. Reviews and deals ; Audio ; Computing ; Gaming UNC is conspiring to pass undeserving athletes by allowing them to take “independent studies” where grades are CURVED a lot. They’re called “paper classes” where attendance isn’t required and athletes only have to submit one essay at the end. Apparently 148 words that read like a third grader’s book summary on Rosa Parks is university level writing. Mary Willingham, a UNC advisor Now, the whole controversy has a rather potent visual symbol to go along with it: a 146-word, ungrammatical essay on Rosa Parks that earned an A- for a real intro class.*
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