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【110】学生、学校对2500万美元的大学招生骗局的反应

littleflute 漂泊者乐园 2021-10-05

DUCATION

Students, Schools React to $25-Million College Admissions Scam

March 16, 2019

William "Rick" Singer, front, founder of the Edge College & Career Network, exits federal court in Boston on Tuesday, March 12, 2019, after he pleaded guilty to charges in a nationwide college admissions bribery scandal.

United States government lawyers called it the biggest college admissions scamever prosecuted by the U.S. Justice Department.

On March 12, U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling announced that 50 people across the country had been charged in a $25-million plot to reportedly buy admission into top American colleges. Lelling said the plot was set up to guarantee admissions to top colleges for students, in his words, “not on their merits, but through fraud.”


FBI Special Agent in Charge Boston Division Joseph Bonavolonta, left, and U.S. Attorney for District of Massachusetts Andrew Lelling, right, face reporters as they announce indictments at a news conference on March 12, 2019



The colleges included top schools like Yale, Stanford and Georgetown. Others were Wake Forest, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of California at Los Angeles and many more.

Lelling said the colleges themselves were not directly involved in the plot, however.

The plot included cheating on college entrance exam, creating false athletic and school successes, and hiding payment as charitable donations to avoid paying taxes.

The U.S. attorney named William “Rick” Singer as the organizer of the plot. Singer reportedly did so using his business, Edge College & Career Network, and an organization called The Key Worldwide Foundation (KWF).

Singer agreed to cooperate with the investigation in September 2018. He admitted guilt to the charges on the day of Lelling’s announcement.

The charging documents say Singer advised parents to seek more time for their children by claiming they had learning disabilities. Singer also paid test administrators to permit another person to help the students with answers or take the test for them. The parents charged in the plot reportedly paid Singer between $15,000 and $75,000 for such services. Their payments were listed as donations to KWF.


FILE - Actor Felicity Huffman leaves an initial hearing for defendants in a racketeering case involving the allegedly fraudulent admission of children to elite universities, at the U.S. federal courthouse in downtown Los Angeles, California.



American actor Felicity Huffman was among the parents charged. Her daughter received extra time to take the SAT. Her test score increased by 400 points from her first time taking it because a test administrator working with Singer changed Huffman's daughter's answers for her.

Gordon Ernst, the head coach for tennis at Georgetown University, also was charged. Between 2012 and 2018, the U.S. attorney said Ernst received $2.7 million to name 12 students as recruits for the tennis team. The money sent from KWF was called a “consulting” fee.

In January 2018, Singer reportedly paid the head coach of Yale’s women’s soccer team $400,000 to accept a student who did not even play the sport competitively. That coach is Rudolph Meredith. The student’s family reportedly then paid Singer $1.2 million for the service.


Actress Lori Loughlin, center, is seen with her daughters Isabella Rose Giannulli and Olivia Jade Giannulli in Los Angeles, Calif.



American actor Lori Loughlin and her husband, clothing designer Mossimo Giannulli, paid $500,000 to have their two daughters admitted to University of Southern California (USC) as recruits for the crew team. Yet neither of the two girls were even rowers.

Gordon Caplan, co-chairman of the well-known international law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, reportedly paid Singer $75,000 to help raise his daughter’s test scores. In a phone call, Singer told Caplan, “What we do is we help the wealthiest families in the U.S. get their kids into school…There is a front door which means you get in on your own. The back door is through institutional advancement, which is 10 times as much money. And I’ve created this side door in.”

Nick Smith is a professor at the University of New Hampshire. He told the Associated Press, “I don’t think anyone is shocked that children of the wealthy have an easier time getting into top schools.”

But Smith added, “What is new here is that all of those considerable advantagesapparently aren’t enough for some, and they will go to any length to directly buy their way in.”

Several students have filed a lawsuit against Yale, Georgetown, Stanford and other schools involved in the case. They said they and others had been denied a fair chance at admission.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday, said, “Each of the universities took the students’ admission application fees while failing to take adequate steps to ensure that their admissions process was fair and free of fraud, bribery, cheating and dishonesty."

Colleges quickly moved to dismiss or suspend any coaches and test administrators named in the charging documents.

Georgetown officials said Ernst left in December 2017 after the college found that he had violated admissions rules. The school said it was now looking at the tennis team to review its recruits.

USC officials said the college is looking at “current students and graduates that may be connected to the scheme alleged by the government.”

And, Yale said the university was “the victim of a crime.”

I'm Dorothy Gundy.

And I’m Pete Musto.


Hai Do wrote this report for VOA Learning English. Ashley Thompson was the editor.

_____

Words in This Story


scam - n. a dishonest way to make money by deceiving people

merit - n. a good quality or feature that deserves to be praised

fraud - n. the crime of using dishonest methods to take something valuable from another person

athletic - adj. of or relating to sports, games, or exercises

recruit - n. a person who has recently joined a company, organization, etc.

rower - n. a person who rows a boat

advantage - n. something (such as a good position or condition) that helps to make someone or something better or more likely to succeed than others

adequate - adj. good enough : of a quality that is good or acceptable

scheme - n. a clever and often dishonest plan to do or get something

bribery - n. the act or crime of giving or accepting a bribe



dir:

VOA英语慢速听力 88 篇(教育类2018小结):【目录9】


:

【109】好莱坞明星,主管大学录取的高管被罚

【108】State Funding, Private Donations to US Colleges Increasing

【107】Study:美国多数白人学校比非白人学校多得到230亿美元

【106】The Rise of Colleges without Classes or Professors

【105】Can Language Learning Happen During Sleep?

【104】States Look to Increase Governance of Struggling Colleges

【103】大学兄弟会或女生联谊会损害学生的表现

【102】Wikitongues Seeks to Save World’s Dying Languages

【101】高校教材由印刷走向数字化

【100】滑雪冠军瞄准常春藤联盟教育

【99】美国大学很难留住校长

【98】研究表明:说“父母语”有助于婴儿的语言学习

【97】用艺术传授社交和情感技能

【96】大学集团致力于收集访问、完成的数据

【95】作为学校学习工具的电子游戏

【94】美国博士学位可能会失去吸引力

【93】美国研究:高中毕业生有很多好工作

【92】多睡有助于大学生在课堂上的学习

【91】教育 Award-Winning 'Dreamer' Fears He Cannot Return to US

【90】What Does the Future Hold for Liberal Arts Graduates?

【89】教育 US High School Students Learn Construction by ...

【88】College Admissions: Searching for Financial Support

【87】教育  Woman Reaches Lifelong Goal of College Degree at 84

【86】US Education Secretary’s Policy Changes Had Mixed ...

【85】教育 Study:Class Size Has Only Minor Effect on Student Results

【84】Mexican President Orders End to Disputed Education Reforms

【83】教育: Number of US Students Studying Abroad Continues to Grow

【82】教育Microsoft: US Schools Short on Computer Science Training

【81】教育: Study: Most US College Administrators Are Liberal

【80】教育‘Moana' Hawaiian Version Seeks to Save Endangered Language

【79】教育: US Considers New Restrictions on Chinese Students

【78】教育:Groups, Colleges to Help Former Students Finish...

【77】教育: Tips for Writing: ‘They Say, I Say’

【76】教育:提高演讲技巧的三条小贴士

【75】教育: 用肢体语言提高你的演讲能力

【74】教育: 成功的辩论就像建造一座房子

【73】教育:规划演示文稿的五个技巧

【72】美国农村学校只有一名学生,一名教师

【71】教育:Website Helps College Students Deal with Mental...

【70】教育US Education Secretary Proposes New Rules on Sexual...

【69】教育: Former New York Mayor Gives $1.8 Billion to Johns...

【68】教育US College IT Services Face Serious Spending Limits,...

【67】教育:Number of International Students Coming to US...

【66】教育US National Average Data Removed from ‘College Scorecard’

【65】教育:Yemeni Teacher Opens Home to 700 Students

【64】教育US Universities Reconsider Ties with Saudi Arabia

【63】教育:Number of English Learners in US Schools Keeps Rising

【62】教育 Non-degree Programs May Not Serve Men and Women Equally

【61】教育:Language Study: Babies Learn Better with Others

【60】教育Students Win Legal Action against US Education Department

【59】教育:Harvard Accused of Discriminating Against Asian-Americans

*【58】教育:US Public Colleges Fail to Serve Black Students, Study..

【57】教育:Study: Nearly 10 Percent of US Airbnb Hosts Are Teachers

【56】教育:'Free College' Programs May Not Help Neediest Students

 

【55】教育:Puerto Rico Students Still Suffer Effects of...

【54】教育: Does Using Technology in the Classroom Help College...

【53】教育:More US Schools Teaching Skills to Recognize False News

【52】教育:Report: Long Writing Assignments Now Less Common at...

【51】教育:UN: Half of Young Teenagers Face Violence or Bullying...

【50】教育:Parents, Leaders Work to End 'Hazing' at US Colleges

【49】教育:American Indian Charter School Wins Approval in Oklahoma

【48】教育:More International College Students Staying to Work in US

【47】教育:Gates Foundation Announces $92 Million Assistance to...

【46】教育:New English Tests Beyond TOEFL, IELTS

【45】教育:EDUCATION  Report: Teachers Find Technology Mostly...

【44】教育:  Study Suggests Many College Graduates are ...

【43】教育: Study Finds Support for Charter Schools Growing in US

【42】教育: Many US States Struggle with Teacher Shortages

【41】教育:Study: Many Students Who Quit College Are Close to...

【40】教育:US University Puts Electronic Assistants in All ...

【39】教育: College Admissions: Making the Decision to Transfer

【38】教育:Watch Out for English and German ‘Falsche Freunde’

【37】What Do Colleges Want?

【36】Some US Colleges Offer Full Scholarships to Gamers

【35】Some Colleges Ask for Part of Future Salary Instead of Loans

教育【34】250 Years Might Return to AP World History Course After..

教育【33】 Some US Colleges Let Students Bring Animals to School

教育【32】More US Schools Offering International Baccalaureate...

教育【31】College Admissions: Easing the Process through Open...

教育【30】US to Stop Urging Schools to Consider Race in Admissions

教育【29】US Educators Debate Proposal to Cut Thousands of Years...

教育【28】Sharing Your Gifts with the World at the University of...

教育【27】Chinese Professor Removed after Reports from ...

教育【26】Reaching for Perfection at the University of Nevada...

【25】Oxford English Dictionary Adds ‘Brencheese,’ ‘Spoiler Alert’

教育【24】 Enjoying the Familiar and Unfamiliar at Brigham Young...

教育【23】Norwegian Study: IQ Scores Dropped for Decades

教育【22】Adapting to Change at the University of New Mexico

教育【21】E-Cigarette Sellers Offer Financial Aid to Students

教育【20】Getting the Most from Every Moment at the University of..

*教育【19】Study Finds Hot Classrooms Hurt Learning

教育【18】Forming a Second Family at Mesa Community College

教育【17】Pakistan ‘Street Schools’ Open to Poor Kids, Parents

教育【16】Graduation Speeches Discuss World Problems, Look for...

教育【15】News Literacy Lesson 6: News and Social Media

教育【14】 News Literacy Lesson 5: Quality of News Reports

教育【13】 News Literacy Lesson 4: Balance, Fairness

教育【12】News Literacy Lesson 3: Establishing the Truth

教育【11】News Literacy Lesson 2: Verification, Independence, ...

教育【10】It's Important to Know Your 'False Friends' in English...

教育【9】News Literacy Lesson 1: Real News vs. Fake News

教育【8】News Literacy Introduction: News Through Time

教育【7】College Admissions: Showing Your Best Side on Social Media

教育【6】Study: US Job Program for Foreign Students Greatly Expands

教育【5】Should SAT and ACT Test Results Be Optional in ...

教育【4】US Graduation: Are Today’s High School Students Prepared?

教育【3】Colleges Admissions: Finishing as Strongly as You Start

【2】Study Finds Africans Among Best Educated US Immigrants

教育【1】American Colleges Want More Rural Students



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