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Fairfield fraud:

Student changes six grades by hacking professors' accounts, allowed to graduate via online courses

Keith Connors

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Published: Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Updated: Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Grade Change

Photo Illustration by Peter Caty

Cheating your way to the top: A Fairfield student is being allowed to graduate with a general degree after changing grades on six of his courses last year. He received a withdrawn for the courses, but is completing his degree via University College.

Burglar

Caught!: A teacher who double-checked her grades noticed the discrepancy.

Grossman

Grossman

A stressful night of studying turns into an emotional breakdown. Weeks worth of assignments and term papers pile endlessly on a desk. Solitude and anxiety slowly degenerate into desperation, despair, and, in the case of a student yet to be named, crime.

A former Fairfield employee and full-time undergraduate biology major tampered with StagWeb's BANNER grading system to adjust his final grades shortly before graduation.
The identity and name of the student, though, has yet to be released by Public Safety or the University's academic office.

According to a report released by academic Vice President Orin Grossman, the student abused his privileges as an employee of the University by obtaining StagWeb identification numbers of six of his professors. He then reset the passwords of each of his professors individually, using StagWeb's default privacy settings.

"When faculty members enter grades in StagWeb, there is a window of time before those grades are rolled into BANNER by the Registrar' office," said Grossman in a memorandum to all faculty members.

"The student gained access during that window of time and changed six grades," he said.
The student's rouse became apparent to a professor shortly before graduation, who subsequently filed a report with the University.

"A colleague of mine discovered that there had been a grade change," said a professor who requested anonymity. "She went back on a subsequent day to enter other [undergraduate] grades and discovered that the grade had been changed."

A tampering charge was then filed via Public Safety, an immediate investigation among university offices began, and the student's degree was eventually withheld.

The incident, though, was far from isolated. While four of the grades changed involved the student's courses in the spring semester of 2008, two professors discovered inconsistencies with his final grades from the previous fall semester.

Additionally, access to a faculty member's StagWeb account pertains to far more than just student grades.

The student potentially had access to "faculty social security numbers, bank account information, retirement portfolios, [and] student degree evaluations of the professor's former students and advisees" through the faculty version of StagWeb, according to a professor involved in the incident.

"Information, such as the social security numbers of all professors, should not be available," the professor added.

Grossman confirmed that "in principal" access to the information was potentially available.

However, he added that a review of computer access logs by Computer and Networking Services maintained that the student had only adjusted grades and did not tamper with other information.

Several other discrepancies, though, exist in the story.

Richard DeWitt, a professor in the philosophy department, was particularly surprised that Grossman's memo mentioned a cross-functional investigation involving "a broad consultation within the university."

"The [Grossman] memo mentioned that there was broad consultation," said DeWitt. "But there was no consultation with the faculty involved."

Grossman, though, maintained that incidents of academic dishonesty extend beyond the jurisdiction of faculty members, and that the decision ultimately belonged in the hands of the administration.

"The professors had submitted their grades," said Grossman. "Once a grade is handed in, it is out of the professors' hands."

Grossman added, "Professors were victimized by this situation, and you don't want to ask someone who has been victimized recommendations on how to deal with an issue. You need an independent voice."

In addition, there was apparent displeasure among professors with the end result.
Grossman's investigation committee, after discussing the issue extensively with administration and the individual, ultimately decided to mark the adjusted grades on the student's transcript as "W," or withdrawn.

The student's academic profile will have a full account of the incident and will be revealed in future background checks. However, he receives no penalty in terms of GPA and will have no record of the incident on his course records.

Furthermore, the administration ultimately decided to allow the student to remain a part of the Fairfield community and complete his degree, ironically, via the Internet through University College.

"It's an outrage," said DeWitt. "If I was a student, I would be particularly upset with this result."

DeWitt added, "There have been far less serious cases of academic dishonesty that have received far harsher penalties."

Grossman, though, felt that "the punishment was severe enough" and that he had no intentions of "ruining the person's life."

"At a certain point, a feeling of cura personalis sets in," Grossman said. "Hopefully he'll have learned something."

In addition to Grossman's decision, faculty that were directly involved are particularly bothered by the procedural process of the investigation.

"As soon as one of my colleagues found out about the grade discrepancy, we reported it to the Chair [of the Department,] who then wrote a letter and reported it to Public Safety and the Academic Vice President," said a professor who wished to remain anoynymous.

"[The administration] took it from there and, basically, we were never informed of anything besides that," said the professor.

DeWitt echoed similar sentiments in terms of the investigation's time line.

"About May 10 we received a one to two sentence e-mail regarding the issues and the particulars," said DeWitt. "Almost two and a half months later, we received word of the finalized story. Faculty was not even informed that their identities has been impersonated."

DeWitt felt that the administration was not being secretive, but rather blatantly ignored faulty input regarding what he referred to as "the most extreme case of action that falls under academic dishonesty I've ever seen."

"We should have been informed of the investigation," said DeWitt.

"In terms of the punishment, if the University decided that [allowing him to continue through University College] was the best course of action, the faculty would not have been happy."

"But to be entirely left out of the loop is outrageous," said DeWitt.

Grossman did concede that he regretted the lack of contact between the administration and the faculty directly involved regarding the investigation.

"That's something I regret and I apologize," said Grossman.

As if the story itself or the administration's decision is not provocative enough, one intriguing fact still stands: no one on campus knows.

"There should've been notification to everyone – faculty, students, staff," said DeWitt.
"In retrospect, it could've been a positive experience, a learning experience," said a professor. "The administration could have said that things of this nature will not be tolerated."

While it is uncertain as to the whether a valuable lesson has been learned or justice has been served, one glaring truth exists: A student sits behind a keyboard yet again to finish a degree.

Comments

5 comments
Your name
Thu Sep 25 2008 08:21
Agreed, you cheat, you have to pay the consequences. People work too hard for their grades to see something like this happen.
Alex Smith
Tue Sep 23 2008 12:23
maybe if stagweb actually worked this wouldn't have happened..... just a thought
Your name
Fri Sep 19 2008 11:50
Valid points, but is it really fair to give murderers and star athletes a second chance when they cheat or kill? We all know that both of those systems are kind of messed up. Its not like the person cheated on one test, they altered their entire grade so they can graduate. In any other university, i wouldnt be surprised if the cheater were expelled and thrown out of school. Maybe thats a bit rash, but there needs to be some kind of negative reinforcement so others dont think its ok BEFORE the person gets their second chance.
Your name
Thu Sep 18 2008 16:14
Ok what he did was wrong i think everyone knows that, but should that mean that he gets punished for the rest of his life. I mean many people cheat in college and in high school i agree not all to this great magnitude, but shouldn't someone get a second chance. I mean we live in a country that gives murders a second chance and gives star athletes a second chance, but we want to crucify someone because he cheated. I don't think want he did was right, it was wrong but fairfield is a school which is built around cura personalis, so i think that he should get a second chance
Scott Kimberly
Thu Sep 18 2008 14:44
So i guess its ok to cheat if you apologize for it or just promise to be a "really good boy from now on"?

You cheat and get caught you should fail, regardless of what you cheated on.





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