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ESPN Drops the
Ball
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| Capped and tapped:
student athlete Shane Battier at his 2001 graduation,
a month before his NBA draft |
| photo:Les
Todd |
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As the men's basketball team prepared for
the post-season, university officials weighed the merits of two
ESPN programs that examined how Duke applies its admission and academic
standards to male basketball players.
One segment, which ran on ESPN's SportsCenter a week before the
NCAA tournament began, suggested that Duke has lowered its admission
standards for basketball players over the past decade as a way to
recruit top players. The following evening, ESPN's Outside the Lines
examined the graduation rates of men's college basketball players,
particularly African-American players. It noted that thirty-six
universities in Division I--including such national powerhouses
as Arkansas and Cincinnati--have not graduated a single African-American
player in the most recent six-year time frame used by the NCAA to
record graduation rates. ESPN contrasted these programs with Duke,
which on many occasions has had all the members of its men's basketball
team graduate on time. But it went on to question whether Duke's
record is indeed so successful.
ESPN interviewed senior associate athletics director Chris Kennedy
Ph.D. '79, admissions director Christoph Guttentag, and sociology
chair Ken Spenner for the two pieces, but ran only brief snippets
of Kennedy's and Guttentag's remarks and none of Spenner's comments.
President Nannerl O. Keohane says that from her talks with Kennedy
and Guttentag, she is convinced "there has not been 'slippage'
in the admissions standards for our student athletes."
"I am confident that both Christoph and Chris, and others
involved in the admissions process for athletes, have a very good
sense of which young people can do the work at Duke--and not just
graduate, but benefit from the educational experience," Keohane
added in the faculty-staff publication Duke Dialogue. "Sometimes
their judgment turns out not to have been on the mark, but it doesn't
happen often. Sometimes a student athlete gets diverted from what
clearly could have been his or her true potential, but that, too,
doesn't happen as often as the program seemed to imply."
Kennedy and Guttentag say they do not believe their sides of the
story were adequately addressed in the two segments. "I, for
one, don't believe that admissions standards have slipped in any
significant way," said Kennedy. "I think that, one, more
attention is being paid to them than in the past; two, people place
too much significance in numbers alone--SAT, GPA--when an admissions
decision is a much more complicated matter; and three, the general
standards of admission have risen somewhat over the last ten years
while athletics standards have remained more or less constant."
Kennedy says the fundamental standards all recruited athletes
must meet is, "Can the candidate do satisfactory work at Duke?"
While acknowledging that occasional mistakes do occur, Kennedy adds,
"Christoph has never compromised the fundamental standard."
Guttentag, who makes the final call on all admissions decisions
regarding recruited athletes, says he bases his judgments on a number
of factors--not solely on test scores. "When we admit any student,
it is because he or she has something significant to add to the
Duke community. Over the years, I have been contacted by faculty
and staff involved with music, drama, dance, and debate, for example,
as they advocate for applicants with particular talents. And, as
with athletes, we balance all of these students' qualities and talents,
academic and otherwise, in the context of the university's various
goals and priorities, in deciding who should be admitted. The university
has made a significant commitment to athletics and the admissions
process is one of the ways that commitment is expressed."
Outside the Lines suggested that several players have majored
in sociology because it offers an easy path to graduation. Sociology's
Ken Spenner told Duke Dialogue, "Duke does not have an undergraduate
business major. What is offered, administered by the sociology department,
is a popular interdisciplinary concentration, similar to a minor,
in Markets and Management Studies. It's a logical program to take
at Duke if you're interested in business, marketing, or advertising,
as many athletes tend to be."
The Markets and Management Program is popular among Duke students;
about 14 percent of Duke graduates earn a certificate from the program.
"Also, a good number of sports teams are composed of women,
and some sports teams have a stronger representation of members
of minority groups," Spenner added. "These social groups
may find the subject matter of sociology intrinsically interesting,
for example, in courses on social inequality, gender, race and ethnic
relations, social networks, the changing nature of the family, and
social movements." Athletes might also select social-science
majors because their practice and travel schedules make it difficult
for them to take courses with lab requirements.
Spenner disputes the show's claim that sociology is easier than
other majors. "What constitutes an easy major?" he asked.
"In terms of required courses, we're fairly typical of the
social-science majors. For example, we have a required statistics
course, a required research methodology course, and a required theory
course, so about one-third of our major's required courses are not
what I think students in general would say are easy. Another way
to define easy is grading, and we've looked at our overall grade
distribution, how grades assigned in sociology compare with grades
college-wide, and we find we're pretty close to the university average."
Others interviewed for the show included Stuart Rojstaczer, an
associate professor of earth sciences; Duke guard Jason Williams
'02; former players William Avery '99 and Crawford Palmer '92; former
admissions officer Rachel Toor; and former Chronicle sports editor
Brody Greenwald '01.
"College athletics would be better off if the Dukes of the
world admitted what everyone already knows: balancing academics
with big time sports just isn't possible under the current rules,"
Rojstaczer said in Duke Dialogue. "College athletics are in
desperate need of major reform. Duke, if it admitted its inability
to do the impossible, could lead the way in overhauling the current
system. Should Duke do that? There's no doubt in my mind."
In an editorial, The Chronicle said the university should be more
candid in releasing information about athletes' impact on academic
life and about preferential admissions policies. According to the
editorial, "Even if ESPN's segments contained bias, the accusations
raised remain serious, and the athletics department and university
administrators should forthrightly answer them."
Keohane says Duke, like all other universities, wrestles with
the challenge of balancing academic excellence and athletic excellence.
"These challenges are sometimes competitive and sometimes mutually
reinforcing, both in the lives of student athletes and of other
members of the community who delight in their stellar performances
and the way they represent our university. I am firmly convinced
that Duke does a better job than almost anyone else at this, and
I think the evidence shows this, even though we need to be consistently
attentive to these challenges to make sure we live up to our ideals
and our well-earned reputation."
"The questions they asked and the issues they raised are
important, but they aren't new to us," Kennedy says. "We
have asked them and thought about them for years. We will continue
to do so and continue to be self-critical and to examine and re-examine
our role as a part of an educational enterprise. Everybody says
this stuff, but I really believe it."
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