Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "academics" ...

  • Unfair Game

    Texas high school athletics rules prohibit students from transferring from district to district for athletic purposes, but that hasn’t stopped coaches and administrators from openly flouting the rules to assemble state championship-caliber teams as part of an underground recruiting system that puts athletics over academics. WFAA investigative reporter Brett Shipp's reports showed how improper recruiting helped Dallas' Kimball Knights build back-to-back state champ basketball teams, and how former Dallas Cowboy Deion Sanders' new school, Prime Prep Academy, also drew in blue-chip players against the rules.

    Tags: High school athletics; sports; coach; recruiting system; state champion team

    By Brett Shipp, investigative reporter; Billy Bryant, photographer and video editor; Jason Trahan, producer

    WFAA-TV (Dallas)

    2012

  • First Do No Harm: Parkland in State's Worst 5

    The reporters found that Parkland Memorial Hospital and another hospital run by its academic partner were among the least safe hospitals in Texas and had been for years.

    Tags: hospital; doctors; healht; safety; healthcare

    By Ryan McNeill; Daniel Lathrop

    Dallas Morning News

    2011

  • Scandals In Atlanta Public Schools

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution analyzed of the 2008 standardized test scores in the Atlanta Public School System and laid the foundation for coverage of what is considered the largest case of academic fraud in the nation's history.

    Tags: No Child Left Behind; Atlanta Public Schools; Cheating; Test Fraud; Academic Fraud

    By Heather Vogell, Alan Judd, John Perry

    Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    2011

  • "Urban League Gets Mixed Grades On Crenshaw Area Overhaul"

    This series attempts to provide a "midway progress report" for a major, $25 million effort by the Los Angeles Urban League to "address academic problems at Crenshaw High School," and several other "social ills" that bother the neighborhood that surrounds the campus. Reporters interviewed members of the community, school and local law enforcement in an effort to report on the progress of the program. They found the Urban League's Neighborhoods@Work program "met some goals and fell short of others."

    Tags: Los Angeles Urban League; Crenshaw High; LAPD; L.A. Unified School District; L.A. City Attorney's Office; California Public Records Act; records request

    By Callie Schweitzer; Olga Khazan; Andrew Khouri; Shirin Parsavand; Catherine Cloutier; LeTania Kirkland

    Neon Tommy (University of Southern California)

    2010

  • Renaissance 2010: Searching for Equity

    Karps' investigation looked into the the impact of Renaissance 2010, an education initiative in Chicago intended to "open 100 new schools, most of the charter schools, and close 70 failing schools within a span of six years" in an effort to bring better education to areas that needed it most. This investigation looks at the actual results of the plan. To report the story, Karp had to struggle against the barriers to obtaining meaningful information on charter schools. While funded publicly, they are operated by private companies that are not subject to the same transparency laws as public schools.

    Tags: education; charter schools; public schools; academic performance; FOIA; transparency; Renaissance 2010; Chicago

    By Sarah Karp

    Catalyst Chicago

    2010

  • East of St. Louis School District 189 investigation

    This investigation into East St. Louis School District 189 shows misuse of funds and highlights questionable decisions at administrative levels for both academics and athletics. About 7,500 students attend classes in the district that has received constantly failing grades when compared to educations achievement statewide. The district receives millions in federal "Title 1" money because more than 90 percent of its students live blow the poverty line. However, this investigation revealed questionable use of those taxpayer funds. In September, the story took a turn and focused on the champion East St. Louis Flyers football team that was eventually kicked out of the state playoffs despite having an undefeated recored. In these stories, questionable practices by district officials regarding strict residency rules were revealed.

    Tags: Title 1; academics; athletics; school; students; low-income; taxpayer; East St. Louis Flyers; football; School District 189; corruption; finance; FOI

    By Maria Baran; George Pawlaczyk; Gary Dotson; Mike Koziatek

    News-Democrat (Belleville, Ill.)

    2010

  • "NCAA - College Athletic Fees"

    In this months-long report, USA Today analyzed hundreds of "financial reports" that college athletic programs are "required to release to the NCAA." They found that many schools are relying more on student fees to finance sports programs (without student's knowledge). The investigation also reveals a growing "unrest" at many universities in response to the financial "divide between sports and academics."

    Tags: Football Bowl Subdivision; Coalition of Intercollegiate Athletics; Big East Conference; University of Cincinnati; Nebraska State; Louisiana State; Atlantic Coast; Big Ten; Big 12; Pacific-10; Southeastern

    By Jodi Upton; Steve Berkowitz; Jack Gillum

    USA Today (McLean, Va.)

    2010

  • NCAA: Mixed Messages

    The phrase “student-athlete” has been used for a number of years, but recently it seems unsuitable for college athletics. In this series, a number of issues are spotlighted and they include “academics, the arms race, television money, the use of likenesses and images, and the myth of the four-year scholarship”. The main purpose of this series was to display the recent activities of college athletics and let you decide if the phrase “student-athlete” still applies.

    Tags: athletic department; FOIA; Florida State; Rutgers University; sports; networks; money; grades; classroom; education

    By Dwayne Bray; Ronnie Forchheimer; Paula Lavigne; Nicole Noren; Arty Berko; Justine Gubar; Rayna Banks; Dave Lubbers; Tom Farrey; Mark Fainaru; Thomas J. Quinn; Steve Delsohn

    ESPN (Television Network) (Bristol, CT)

    2009

  • Secrecy 101

    "Universities hide information about their athletics departments behind a student-privacy law designed to keep grades private." Further, it hides athletes, who have done a number of unethical and some illegal activities. Also, coaches are using the law to hide their own bad behavior. All this information stunned the senator who created the law and he believes the "institutions are putting their own meaning into the law."

    Tags: education; college; Senator James L. Buckley; NCAA; Ohio State; FOIA; Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA); federal; sports; public records; censor; academics

    By Jill Riepenhoff; Todd Jones

    Dispatch (Columbus, Ohio)

    2009

  • Curse of the Class of 2006

    This story explains how the class of 2006 became known as the “cursed class” due to the number of deaths during and following the 2006 school year. The school, Carol City Senior High, was one of the best based on the facility and placed in a location still considered farmland. But after students were bused in from surrounding neighborhoods, things began to change and academics fell to the back burner, while athletics excelled. Further, many students believed the atmosphere became very ghetto, which led to several deaths from the class of 2006, who were considered top students.

    Tags: education; high school; public; murders; death; violence; Florida; violent; neighborhood; area

    By Gus Garcia-Roberts

    New Times (Miami)

    2009