HSC for sale in tutor scam
EXCLUSIVE by RICKY SUTTON
June 20, 2005
HUNDREDS of children have been able to buy their way into university in a cash-for-coursework scam being run by a Sydney teacher.
The Daily Telegraph can reveal a teacher from a state-run high school has been earning up to $5000 a subject to do school work for pupils.
The teacher's company is accused of faking work to help more than 250 pupils win university places.
In one case, the agency took two pages of rough notes written by a Year 12 pupil and converted them into a 32-page novelette, which got 48 marks out of 50.
In another, the agency wrote four poems from scratch and gave them to a pupil to enable her to get the UAI grades she needed to get into university.
The teacher or her agency is not registered with any tutoring organisation so is not subject to any controls or checking.
The HSC examination is split into two elements: coursework and assessments that make up 50 per cent, and an exam which constitutes the remainder.
The BMW-driving teacher is paid up to $5000-a-subject to cheat on the coursework requirements.
She is currently on unpaid sick leave from the Sydney high school where she is employed as an English teacher.
A former worker, who blew the whistle on the scandal, told The Daily Telegraph: "You can literally buy your child into university. It is completely unethical.
"The parents all knew. None of them was angry when [the agency] offered to do the work.
"Some of the children we saw didn't have a hope. One was signed with [them] for help in five subjects and was really struggling.
"After [they] did her work for her, she ended up with an above average 83 UAI and is now at the University of Technology, Sydney."
The former tutor said he had done the coursework of more than 250 Year 12 pupils before quitting.
"About 40 per cent of them [100 students] would not have got the UAI needed to get into university without my help," he said.
"The rest were from selective schools and were often very intelligent. For them it was a matter of pride to get better marks and their families were willing to buy them the marks that would give them the edge."
The way it would usually work was that a pupil came to the agency with a parent and a first draft of their coursework.
Ethical tutoring agencies, many of which are registered with the Australian Tutoring Authority, would offer additional teaching to help them improve their work.
This particular agency, however, took the draft and reworked it themselves, cheating the system.
Australian Tutoring Authority spokesman Mohan Dhall said good tutors did not cheat on behalf of their clients.
"ATA members are bound by a code of conduct which ensures that the students have their skill levels boosted so that they can become independent learners," Mr Dhall said.
"Unfortunately, the Board of Studies, which registers schools, has no capacity to regulate the conduct of private tutoring organisations which engage in the practices that [this agency] is alleged to have engaged in.
"Thus, tutors and tutoring organisations are strongly encouraged to join the ATA in order to state to the public they will never engage in dubious business practices."