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  • JUDY WOODRUFF: High school students and their parents know all too well just how intense

  • the competition for college admissions can be.

  • But today's announcement from federal prosecutors was still a shocker.

  • They arrested and charged 50 people across the U.S. for participating in a bribery and

  • cheating scam to get students into elite schools.

  • The case was called Operation Varsity Blues.

  • As William Brangham tells us for our weekly education segment, Making the Grade, the scheme

  • allegedly included wealthy parents, among them well-known actresses, college coaches,

  • and a dishonest college admissions counseling program.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The scheme revolved in large part around a college prep business, often

  • referred to as the Key.

  • The government said the company's founder, William Singer, helped students cheat on standardized

  • tests, and paid roughly $25 million in bribes to college athletic coaches so that kids could

  • enter college with fake athletic credentials.

  • In some instances, the students didn't even play the sport.

  • To mask the fraud, some students faces were actually Photoshopped onto another athlete's

  • body.

  • Two well-known actresses, Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin, allegedly paid into the

  • scheme for their children.

  • Among the schools targeted were Yale, Georgetown, Stanford, and UCLA.

  • And here's how Andrew Lelling, the U.S. attorney in Massachusetts, characterized this case:

  • ANDREW LELLING, U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts: This case is about the widening corruption

  • of elite college admissions through the steady application of wealth, combined with fraud.

  • Every year, hundreds of thousands of hardworking, talented students strive for admission to

  • elite schools.

  • As every parent knows, these students work harder and harder every year, in a system

  • that appears to grow more and more competitive every year.

  • And that system is a zero-sum game.

  • For every student admitted through fraud, an honest, genuinely talented student was

  • rejected.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: For more on this, I'm joined by Jeffrey Selingo.

  • He's been covering higher ed in America for 20 years, including for "The Chronicle of

  • Higher Education," as well as in three of his own books on the topic.

  • Welcome back.

  • JEFFREY SELINGO, Author, "College Unbound: The Future of Higher Education and What It

  • Means for Students": It's great to be here.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: So, this is a jaw-dropping bribery scandal.

  • I just sort of am gobsmacked by the complexity of this.

  • It seems that the bribery falls into two categories here, cheating on athletics and that role

  • in admissions, and cheating on standardized tests.

  • Can you explain how cheating on the testing worked?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: So, what they did was essentially get doctor's notes to allow these students

  • to take the test by themselves with proctors that were paid off.

  • And those proctors either had somebody else take the test for these students, or they

  • corrected the exam, so that the students would get higher scores.

  • Those scores were then reported to the universities, who, of course, didn't really know who actually

  • took the test.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: And then -- so, obviously, a higher test score helps you get into schools

  • no matter what.

  • But the second part of this is that -- the bribing of athletic coaches and the creating

  • of these sort of phony athletic resumes.

  • Can you explain a little bit?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: I mean, this was the most amazing one to me, because many of these students

  • didn't even play the sports they were purported to play and that they recruited for.

  • And every year, these coaches -- and these are at high-level institutions, in some cases

  • at Division I institutions -- they're recruiting athletes starting in their sophomore and junior

  • year.

  • So for these students to not have to play these sports,and then to get in under that

  • pretense of those sports, I think, was absolutely shocking and amazing to me.

  • And these athletes are given tips in admissions, right?

  • They -- all these colleges have to fill teams, right?

  • They need a starting pitcher on the -- on the baseball team.

  • They need rowers on the crew team, right?

  • So they need to fill these spots.

  • And so, every year, athletes are given advantages in admissions.

  • And, clearly, these students were as well.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: How significant is that advantage?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: Yes.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: I mean, for people who are not familiar with this, the role -- if you

  • really are a star athlete, can you get into a school that would really traditionally be

  • out of your league?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: Yes, you can.

  • I mean, in many of these schools, they are basically the -- the athletic director or

  • the coaches come to the admissions team and say, these are the students we really want.

  • Now, will they accept the bottom of the bottom in terms of academics?

  • Some schools will not.

  • Other schools will and just basically say, we will give them kind of academic support

  • while they -- while they're here.

  • But, basically, every other part of their application could be pretty minimal, but as

  • long as they have athletics on it, it really does help.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: One of the details that you touched on here, I just find it so striking.

  • This is the example in Yale.

  • And this was a young woman in Southern California who didn't play soccer.

  • This -- the guy William Singer helped set up a phony athletic profile, sort of pretending

  • that she played on a very competitive team in Southern California.

  • They then bribe the Yale soccer coach, $400,000, to recruit this student, even though the coach

  • knew that the student had never even put her foot on a ball.

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: No, and it's amazing.

  • I can't even imagine what these other athletes on the team thought of this.

  • But, more so, there was probably an athlete or two that were in the recruiting system

  • for Yale that didn't get in because this student or these students got in.

  • And that's not only true at Yale, but at these other institutions.

  • The U.S. attorney talked about it as a zero-sum game.

  • I mean, in admissions, to be honest with you, I think that many more students are not admitted

  • who are qualified, because the admissions rate at some of these places is like 8 to

  • 10 percent.

  • But, in athletics, you're really competing against one or two other people.

  • And so, in those cases, I think they probably took a spot of somebody.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: At its core, really, this is about wealthy parents who are trying to

  • buy in some ways even more influence for their wealthy children, right?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: I mean, what's amazing to me is that, in some cases, it wouldn't really

  • matter where these kids went to college, right?

  • They have both the means, the financial means, but also the connections to live a great life

  • because of their parents, no matter where they go.

  • So it's kind of shocking that they really wanted that piece of paper from an elite college

  • -- an elite college, because, in many cases, it wouldn't matter where they went.

  • And what was interesting to me about the -- about the ACT and the SAT is that, at many elite

  • colleges, including...

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: These are the standardized tests.

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: The standardized tests.

  • At many elite colleges, including the University of Chicago last year, they're diminishing

  • the use of these, right?

  • University of Chicago went what's called test-optional last year, where students don't have to submit

  • test scores.

  • And at many colleges that I followed over the years, they kind of use the standardized

  • test kind of as a check-in.

  • They're more interested in high school curriculum and high school grades and other parts of

  • the application.

  • So the fact that they spent so much money on standardized tests, thinking that would

  • get them into college, in many ways, they were mistaken.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The criminality aside -- and we can't emphasize how much that this is breaking

  • the law with the bribes that were paid -- doesn't this strike you that this is also an indictment

  • of the cutthroat nature of college applications?

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: Yes.

  • Yes.

  • I mean, we're seeing this more, that the seats are scarce at these -- at the selective colleges

  • and universities.

  • There are more people every year trying to get into them.

  • They represent about a third of applications every year, even though they only represent

  • about 18 percent of students, the most elite colleges.

  • So the competition to get into them is great.

  • And yet we know from research that, in many ways, it doesn't matter where you go to college.

  • It matters how you go to college, and being really engaged in your studies and extracurricular

  • activities, getting internships and other types of activities matter more.

  • But yet we want to get into these colleges because we know the seats are scarce.

  • We're worried about the future of the economy and the future of our children.

  • We want to make sure that they get -- have all the same privileges that we had.

  • And so every year, more and more people are trying to get into these colleges.

  • And we see this in their application totals, right?

  • Everyone's up like 8, 10 percent every year.

  • And they're getting tens of thousands of applications and admitting in many cases fewer than 10

  • percent, in some cases fewer than 5 percent of applicants.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: And, as we see, people are turning to devious means to try to get in.

  • JEFFREY SELINGO: Exactly.

  • WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Jeffrey Selingo, thank you very much.

  • It was great to be with you.

JUDY WOODRUFF: High school students and their parents know all too well just how intense

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