By the 1980s, the for-profit University of Phoenix (UoPX) became a pioneer as a mega-university, a school of over 80,000 students with an emphasis on adult learners, convenience, and a business attitude. For-profit schools gained legitimacy as universities like Devry and UoPX became regionally accredited and others created their own national accreditors. In the 1980s and 90s for-profit colleges grew as they became publicly traded corporations with enormous profits and political power.
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Tuesday, March 9, 2021
The Business of Higher Education
By the 1980s, the for-profit University of Phoenix (UoPX) became a pioneer as a mega-university, a school of over 80,000 students with an emphasis on adult learners, convenience, and a business attitude. For-profit schools gained legitimacy as universities like Devry and UoPX became regionally accredited and others created their own national accreditors. In the 1980s and 90s for-profit colleges grew as they became publicly traded corporations with enormous profits and political power.
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Buyer Beware: Servicemembers, Veterans, and Families Need to Be On Guard with College and Career Choices
Has anyone noticed that Harvard has the fourth highest number of GI Bill complaints? Harvard? Is this a typo?
While several of the schools on the current list of worst actors have bad reputations (e.g. University of Phoenix, Ashford University (aka University of Arizona Global), Colorado Tech, New Horizons, Keller (aka Devry, and Keiser University), Harvard seems to be one of those schools that's not like the other. At first I thought this might be an input error. But on closer look, it appears the complaints may be about Harvard extension and their certificate programs. Haven't been able to verify what these numbers mean. In any case though it illustrates a point: Just because a school has a good label doesn't mean you are getting a quality education or a fair deal.
This also goes to show that servicemembers, veterans, and their families--and all other consumers--must apply the maxim "buyer beware" to every school they consider. Be patient and do your homework. Ask questions and demand credible answers. Use your critical thinking skills. Don't merely rely on word of mouth, advertisements, and rankings.
I have more ideas about college and career choices posted at Military Times, called 8 tips to help vets pick the right college.
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
Higher Ed Became More Brutal During 2020-21 Pandemic
- The Student Debt Crisis is a Crisis of Non-Repayment (Marshall Steinbaum)
- More people with bachelor’s degrees go back to school to learn skilled trades (John Marcus, Hechinger Report)
- Student Loan Losses Seen Costing U.S. More Than $400 Billion (Josh Mitchell, Wal Street Journal)
- Nearly All States Suffer Declines in Education Jobs (Barb Rosewicz & Mike Maciag, Pew)
- COVID-19 Will Likely Shrink Job Market For College Grads (Government Executive)
- Law student debt averages about $165K at graduation, creating stress and restricting choices, survey says (Debra Cassens Weiss, ABA Journal)
- Higher Ed's Dirty Little Secrets (Steven Mintz, Inside Higher Education)
- Colleges Slash Budgets in the Pandemic, With ‘Nothing Off-Limits’ (Shawn Hubler, NY Times)
- Permamanent Budget Cuts Are Coming (Robert Kelchen, CHE)
- A Separate And Unequal System of College Admissions (Anthony Abraham, NY Times)
- House Democrats Drop Canceling Student Loans (Kery Murakami, IHE)
- College Town Economies Brace for Covid Blow (WSJ)
- 30 college towns that could face economic ruin if schools don't reopen or have to close again this fall (Madison Hoff, Business Insider)
- Laureate Education to Sell Walden University to Adtalem Global Education (Market Watch)
- 'It's going horribly': College towns fret about census count (ABC News)
- Student Loans Plummeted for the Summer Term (Kevin Miller, The Century Foundation)
- University of Arizona Acquires Ashford University (IHE, Lindsay McKenzie)
- The Nightmare That Colleges Face This Fall (Adam Harris, The Atlantic)
- No students. No graduation. ‘Total devastation’ in college towns during coronavirus pandemic (Zoe Nicholson and Ed Semmler,Yahoo Finance)
- University Leaders Are Failing (François Furstenberg, Chronicle of Higher Education)
- The Coming Disruption of Higher Education (New York interview with Scott Galloway)
- Demand for refunds intensifies among college students (Jessica Dickler, CNBC)
- Latest Coronavirus News (Inside Higher Education)
- Coronavirus Pushes Colleges to the Breaking Point, Forcing 'Hard Choices' about Education (Wall Street Journal)
- Adjuncts Barely Getting By (Colleen Flaherty, IHE)
- Students are considering dropping out of college because of coronavirus (Abigail Hess, MSN.com)
- Will Parents Pay? (Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed)
- Masters of None (Grace Gedye, Washington Monthly)
- Public Colleges Face Looming Financial Blow (Kery Murakami, Inside Higher Education)
- With May 1 'Decision Day' Looming, 69 Percent of Parents and 55 Percent of Students Say Coronavirus Has Impacted Their Ability to Pay for College (KPVI)
- ‘I Was Horrified’: For Millions of Borrowers, the Coronavirus Stimulus Law Offers No Relief (Danielle McLean, Chronicle of Higher Education)
- Preparing for a Fall Without In-Person Classes (Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Education)
- Presidents Fear Financial, and Human, Toll of Coronavirus (Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Education)
- Will spring breakers become super-spreaders? (Politico)
- The Real Lesson of the College Closures (Saahil Desai, The Atlantic)
- To Fight Coronavirus, Colleges Sent Students Home. Now Will They Refund Tuition? (Melissa Korn and Douglas Belkin, Wall St. Journal)
- The Covid-19 Crisis Is Widening the Gap Between Secure and Insecure Instructors (Megan Zahneis, Chronicle of Higher Education)
- Moody's lowers higher ed outlook to negative amid coronavirus crisis (Jeremy Bauer-Wolf, Education Dive)
- What Is a College Education in the Time of Coronavirus? (NY Times Opinion)
- Community Colleges and the Coronavirus (Madeline St. Amour, Inside Higher Education)
- California AG sues Betsy DeVos for overturning Obama-era rule aimed at for-profit colleges (Aarthi Swaminathan, Yahoo Finance)
- Coronavirus and Admissions Fears (Scott Jaschick, Inside Higher Education)
- Already stretched universities now face huge endowment losses from market meltdown (PBS, Jon Marcus)
- Uncertain Fate for Support Staff (Lilah Burke, IHE)
- 41% of Recent Grads Work in Jobs Not Requiring a Degree (Inside Higher Education)
Friday, January 15, 2021
Chasing Carl Barney: My 7-Year Fight for Student Justice and Corporate Accountability (Debbi Potts)
It was July 16, 2012 and I called a meeting with all of my staff. I was the campus director of CollegeAmerica in Cheyenne Wyoming; one of the many campuses owned by Carl Barney. I called the meeting to inform my staff that I was resigning that day. I wanted to let them know before I emailed a resignation letter to Barney and the CEO and COO and left the building.
The Dean of Education (Linda) also resigned that day because of her concerns about the lack of ethics of the company. My exit was abrupt, and my resignation letter called Barney out on the fraud that his organization is infested with. I left without notice and without a job to go to.
I told my staff that there comes a time in most people’s lives where you cannot put your foot over the line and that day had come for me. I could not put my name on one more enrollment agreement or participate in the fleecing of students.
This is my story of the 7-year chase of Carl Barney as he levied a brutal, retaliatory, and relentless plan to silence me.
Who is Carl Barney?
Carl Barney
is a college owner who has turned his private colleges into money making
machines for the benefit of his own wealth. His schools were a toxic blend of
substandard education, outrageously high tuition, and poor outcomes that left
students deep in debt with little to no skills or hope for a better future. The
demographic of most of the students that were solicited to enroll lacked the
ability to succeed; but that did not matter.
Why did I leave the company and how bad was it?
I was so excited to be part of changing student’s lives through education and taking the role of the top administrator of my own campus. Career schools are high priced and fast paced and unfortunately this one was not about the education of students; it was about sales and enrolling students and pulling down as much federal aid as you could to line Barney’s pockets. As time went on it was evident that the company had no regard for oversight of rules or regulations that guide these types of schools; nor had they ever been held accountable for their blatant contempt.
An associate degree was upwards of $40k and a bachelor degree was $78k! The students were solicited through a hard sell of manipulative sales techniques and the education and equipment left much to be desired. The students struggled in 4-week courses where the mid-term was at the beginning of week 3. The faculty who were mostly all adjuncts and were paid less than $10.00 per hour considering the time they put into lecturing, grading papers and coaching students who needed remedial help before they could even comprehend the course materials.
The company was “enrollment driven” with unrealistic goals every month of starting new students. It is called “greed” at the expense of education. Barney’s motto was “We do as we please and ask for forgiveness later.” Accreditation standards were violated throughout the entire system and the students were the ones who suffered.
An example of disregard for regulations
Barney could not operate his company by merely offering a quality education and focusing on students; he always had to have a scheme to entice and enroll students, even if it were a violation of accreditation. He rolled out a free services program where he decided to offer a free certified nursing course to the general public including all of the books, supplies and certification. Sounds amazingly generous..right? Not so fast. This particular course was part of the medical assisting program and Barney believed that once he gave away “free” services, those students would enroll in the full program. The problem was that each of those students had a target on their back and they were heavily recruited to enroll into the full program. There were literally waiting lists of hundreds of potential enrollees across all of the campuses. Barney never bothered to get this stand-alone course approved through accreditation. Since this course was vocational in nature we also were required to track student completion and placement; that never happened.
Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges (ACCSC), the accrediting agency issued a “cease and desist” of these programs, leaving hundreds and hundreds of students hanging and angry and disillusioned. Campus directors were left on their own to try to explain this deplorable situation to our unsuspecting victims.
What happened next?
Linda and I immediately contacted the Wyoming and Colorado Attorneys Generals offices in order to divulge the numerous issues of consumer fraud that we had witnessed.
I received a personal phone call from Barney a day after my exit. He was definitely on a fishing expedition that was intended to figure out what my plans were moving forward. In that conversation I reported to Barney that the company had owed me $7,000.00 for earned but not paid bonuses. He assured me that he would look into my unpaid bonus. Days went by and I decided to file for lost wages through the Wyoming employment labor board.
On July 21, 2012. I received an email from Barney, and it contained a document entitled “Saying Goodbye” which outlined his theory that you can tell a great deal about the character of people by the way they say goodbye. Additionally, he spewed that he hoped that I had filed a written report within the organization with my concerns about the fraud allegations or I was now a contributor to these allegations of fraud!
I received my bonus in exchange for signing a contract to not disparage the company.
During the months that followed, I was in direct contact with the Attorneys General. In a LinkedIn communication with a former employee of the organization and I asked him to cooperate with the Attorneys General. The employee turned on me and turned the correspondence into Barney. I was sued for an alleged violation of the contract. I represented myself over a two-year period and wrote 75 legal motions to defend myself. I filed a charge with the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) who took a case against them on my behalf.
It was around that time that I met an attorney from Salt Lake City, Utah who had been enjoined by the US Department of Justice in a qui-tam action with several former employees of Barney’s Utah schools because Barney was illegally paying bonuses to admissions recruiters.
Mr. Bandon Mark, this attorney took my case pro-bono and followed me through depositions and court hearings for several years for the lawsuit, while EEOC pursued Barney in federal court.
The entire purpose of this retaliation by Barney was to punish me and intimidate me into silence…it did not work! The more relentless he became, the more the fraud became public, he would not agree to settle anything, and neither would I.
In May of 2019, a jury of 6 people in a two-day trial awarded Barney $1.00 (instead of the $7,000.00 bonus he was trying to recoup). This was the least amount the jury could give!
The Colorado Attorney General’s office testified on my behalf as an optic to show the jury what this malicious lawsuit was really about. As icing on the cake, EEOC forced Barney to never enforce the illegal contract they had issued me. The contract violated public policy by requiring me to not contact any governmental agencies with grievances against Barney or his schools.
What started out as Barney attempting to make an example out of me for speaking the truth about the fraud in his schools actually opened the doors for me to spend 7 years chasing him.
As a result of this chase, I have been deposed numerous times including a 6-hour videotaped deposition all the while his attorneys spewed venom in my face in an attempt to intimidate me. I was scorned publicly in courtrooms for being a whistleblower…none of that mattered.
Barney’s
feeble attempt to stop me from bringing truth forward only made the chase more
enticing and his fury caused him to make many mistakes including spending
hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees against me. His desire to make me pay only served to make
public what he had tried to stop me from saying!
Fruits of my chase:
At the trial where Barney sued me in May 2019; the courtroom was filled with people who got to hear the fraud that Barney had tried to keep silent by suing me! This is in the community where I reside, and community members are now aware of the fraud.
On August 21, 2020, a Colorado Court issued a fraud finding against Barney in a lawsuit where the Colorado Attorney General was the plaintiff, and I was the whistleblower.
I have interviewed with US Department of Justice for an upcoming trial against Barney for illegal bonuses.
I have filed numerous complaints with their accreditor. (ACCSC)
I have interviewed with Veterans Education Success as part of their petition to the VA to cease funding to Barney’s schools.
I have participated in a podcast about my whistleblowing story with Heidi Weber who was responsible for the demise of Globe University with her whistleblowing efforts of their fraud.
I have personally filed a complaint with the Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Inspector General (VA-OIG).
My story has been covered and publicized by David Halperin in Republic Report. Not just once, but twice.
I have also been
interviewed by David Halperin in Republic Report
Indeed …Barney’s schools are in peril
The following are on-going actions of great consequence:
· The company is on probation with ACCSC and serious question are pending regarding the ability of Barney’s schools to continue to operate as a result of the Colorado Attorney fraud finding.
· The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is awaiting a court decision to move forward to compel documents related to loan fraud.
· The US Department of Education in tandem with some former employees are in the “discovery stage” of litigation regarding illegal bonuses Barney paid to recruiters.
· Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois has petitioned the United States Department of Education to look at the possibility of suspending federal funds to Barney’s schools.
· Due
to declining enrollment, the lion’s share of Barney’s brick and mortar schools
are closed, leaving only an online school platform which has its own issues
with ACCSC.
I will continue the chase wherever and whenever I can be helpful in fighting the fraud of Carl Barney in order to prevent more students from being harmed.
Wednesday, January 6, 2021
UT Austin President Eats Cake in a Pandemic (Austin Longhorn*)
Having seen that many of my peers graduate without a good job, it felt terrible to see the leader who is supposed to make its stakeholders succeed is just enjoying life at the top with an insane salary most of the students would never make, even in their wildest dreams.
The career services were horrible at the university. I bet that is still the case. Before Betsy DeVos’s horrible decision to rescind the Gainful Employment Placement Rule, we at least had an idea, though imperfect, how graduates were faring. We don’t even have that information now. However, this article is not about Betsy DeVos or Gainful Employment Placement Data. It is about the callousness of UT Austin President Jay Hartzell who has received a $1.25 Million salary. Yes, you read that right. $1.25 Million in salary that was approved during a pandemic.
UT Austin and every university collects data on their graduates using a Qualtrics or other company survey that the graduates fill out electronically. It is not that President Hartzell did not know that the university students are struggling in the job market. He knows. Yet, he does not care. He cares about his salary and a rubber stamp board of regents approving such a salary.
To put it in perspective, the US President makes $400,000. TX Governor makes $150,000. The Austin Mayor in whose city UT Austin is located makes $80,000. That means with a $1.25 Million salary, Hartzell makes almost double than the salaries of the US President, TX Governor and Austin Mayor make in salaries combined. How do you explain about recruiting top talent when there are public officials who have a lot more responsibilities, who are top of the line talent, that work for less compared to the UT Austin President?
Executive Compensation at Public and Private Colleges (Chronicle of Higher Education)