- He acted immediately, within half an hour of the discovery of the mistake.
- He apologized and expressed his sympathy to the victims.
- He explained, as best as he could reconstruct, exactly how the problem occurred. He did not stonewall or dissemble.
- Even though he was not entirely at fault he took the blame and full responsibility for what happened.
- He assured the victims of a prompt solution and resolution even though he had to consult authorities and even if he had not worked it out yet.
- He apologized again to the victims.
- He worked out a reasonable solution and restitution that could be resolved within the week.
- He gave the victims reasonable options and a chance to make informed choices.
- He did extra work to make things right and the victims knew it.
Pages
▼
Thursday, May 16, 2013
An Academic Scandal Handled Correctly
While it is far too easy to find poorly handled academic scandals these days, it is actually a pleasure to see a major problem handled correctly. This report of a botched final exam at NYU created a big problem and was totally unfair to the students. The professor, Rick Pildes, however, handled the problem the best that he could, and serves a model of how to handle such a scandal. The report deserves to be read if not studied, but the solutions can be summarized: