West Virginia higher education faculty sure are prickly when it comes to allegations of making up grades for students who happen to be the daughters of powerful public officials. The latest allegation is that West Virginia State Treasurer John Perdue’s daughter Emily had two incomplete grades changed to A’s by a dean at Marshall University without Miss Perdue’s professor’s knowledge and approval.
In yesterday’s newspaper, Miss Perdue and her father talked to a reporter about the story. For those of you who were saturated and satiated with coverage of the WVU-Bresch degree scandal, stop reading the newspaper for a few more days.
Interestingly, there appear to be some significant similarities and differences between this story and the Bresch story.
Significant similarities:
- The daughter of a powerful politician;
- A fairly quick investigation/decision by the provost (vulnerable to second-guessing as a “rush to judgment”);
- A decision that favored the daughter; and
- FERPA (privacy law) violations by an individual or individuals seeking to expose the “truth.”
Significant differences:
- We are talking about grades in two classes, not a full-blown degree.
- Miss Perdue actually can produce work that she completed. She also claims to have met with the dean on multiple occasions recently, which should be easily verifiable.
- Miss Perdue has a reasonably good GPA and appears to be a fairly conscientious student.
- This professor may have an axe to grind with the dean.
- To date, there’s no evidence whatsoever that the State Treasurer or friends of the State Treasurer did anything to influence the outcome.
- To date, there’s no evidence of presidential involvement (beyond, I would hope, his being apprised of the results of the provost’s investigation) or connections to Miss Perdue or her father.
- This issue appears to have been treated as the truly academic matter it is.
Predictions:
- You’ll be learning about several things you probably should not, given federal student privacy laws, as this story unfolds. This is a serious downside to being a politican’s daughter; you are a public figure whether or not you want to be.
- This story will not have the “legs” that the Bresch story had because of the “axe-grinding” issue and the evidence that work actually was completed.






I am curious as to why this gets coverage and we had to make the Gazette cover the other story? I hope this is all some misunderstanding. I hope. Perdue doesn’t seem like the kind of man to pick of the phone and ask for favors…and, quite frankly, what damn favors can his office deliver? A big bag of pencils and note pads with his Web site address on it?
A college campus is the most political place on the planet – the state capitol has nothing on it. Professors can be and generally are, political animals; because of that, we should be careful here. Plus, the image and past behavior of the Perdue family has been rather outstanding.
I am not saying other families haven’t been…….I’m just saying.
It would seem to me that the mother’s involvement would be of more concern than John Perdue’s;
• Dean in question has had numerous grievances filed against her
• Ms. Perdue is the Director the state grievance board
• William Bissett, Marshall’s Chief of Staff, also serves on the grievance board
One would assume that with just those three small items and the past history of the WVU/Bresch controversy that Marshall would not allow itself to let the appearance of political favoritism tarnish its name. While in agreement that the student will suffer needlessly from all of this, it all could have been prevented if all the students were truly treated the same. I’m sure that Marshall spin doctors are researching and trying to find another time in Marshall’s history that a Dean has taken a student under their wing like this.
I guess my mind won’t let me assume Marshall would do something as stupid as WVU. Full disclosure: I went to Marshall and hold a soft spot for it.
Let’s see how this shakes out.
[...] Making (Up?) the Grade. 28 September. This post compares and contrasts (mostly the latter) the WVU-Heather Bresch and [...]