A St. Cloud State University faculty member who raised concerns about discrepancies between awarded and recorded grades said Friday that he's not convinced administrators took them seriously, despite a recent visit by federal investigators.
"Academic integrity is something you can't mess around with," said chemistry Prof. Jack McKenna.
But university spokesman Adam Hammer said that nothing "scandalous" occurred and that there was no "wrongdoing," despite the weeklong visit from federal investigators in late June.
The problem was an administrative issue that has been addressed with stepped-up internal communication emphasizing that "faculty needs to be consulted" if students are granted late withdrawals from courses or are allowed to drop courses after grades have already been awarded, Hammer said.
McKenna said he took his concerns to the administration more than a year ago after he and two colleagues found grade changes about which they had not been consulted. "The administration has not taken it seriously," he said.
Although federal agents spent several days at SCSU asking questions, no formal investigation was acknowledged, so what the agents sought isn't known.
McKenna said he was asked about grades being changed and courses being dropped from transcripts without faculty members being notified. Such changes could affect required course loads for financial aid eligibility and the status of student visas for international students.
He said he talked for 90 minutes with two federal agents. One, from the U.S. attorney general's office, works with the U.S. Department of Education on fraud investigations; the other was an FBI special agent, he said.