By Professor Doom
For years, scammy
“for profit” schools have been making a killing destroying our young people as
they go to college. The plan is simple: first, open up a decent looking school.
Second, exploit bogus accreditation to qualify to get tuition loans for
students. Third, open up enrollment (especially online) and annihilate
standards so the school can enroll hordes of students. Use aggressive
recruiting to get the students, and help them max out loans, raising tuition in
tandem with the loans. Then the money rolls in.
I’ve covered a
few schools that use this business plan (and many do), which generates great
profits for the owners (and usually administrators) of the school, but churns
out hordes of students with huge debts and bogus educations that do nothing to
help pay those debts.
The Federal
government, the backer of those loans (until moved to the taxpayers), has,
after 1.2 trillions of dollars of student debt, caught on that something’s not
right here. It’s dimly become aware that accreditation, for all its shiny façade,
is a festering pit of corruption that does nothing to verify schools are
legitimate, and doesn’t
penalize even outrageous acts of fraud.
The Federal
government has also become dimly aware that many, many, fake schools are
operating, plundering and looting with abandon. It’s finally starting to shut
down the schools, even
schools that accreditation says are “perfectly legitimate,” and that
certainly counts for something, but what of all the stolen money?
Again, the
government is thinking about doing something about it:
Yes, the
government is putting together a plan, but, alas, it’s heavily flawed. Allow me
to discuss the plan, and the flaws.
"We
want institutions to know, in no uncertain terms, that they are responsible for
the malfeasance that they create."
“…adopt some form of “risk-sharing”
that would require colleges to pay back some of the federal funds they receive
when students cannot afford their loans. Earlier this month, a bipartisan pair
of senators introduced a bill to do just that.”
This is the first
flaw right here. The government will be targeting institutions for the stolen
money. Despite the “corporations are people” insanity that rules today, the
simple fact is human beings are the ones actually committing the fraud. Yes, shutting
down the institution is nice, but getting the stolen money from the institution
will accomplish nothing: these institutions are being plundered, there is no
money to claw back. Poo Bahs of higher education make a million a year in
salary, and quite a bit more than that in perks (like planes, houses, cars and
drivers, multimillion dollar bonuses for growth, and stellar retirement
programs, to just list a few of the more common perks).
Targeting the
institutions, while the thieving rulers walk away with the money, is idiocy. By the time the government gets
around to asking the college to pay “some of the federal funds,” there’ll be
nothing left.
Even more
ridiculous, the administrators that plundered the school will have more than
enough capital to start up a whole new school…and repeat the process again.
Yo, Federal
government! Target the human beings doing the stealing. Claw back the money
from the people doing the stealing, or this plan will do nothing.
One of the reasons
the Feds are looking into changing how the student loan scam works is
Corinthian Colleges, which the government shut down…stranding students with no
way to pay their debts, and with lots of Corinthian credits which can’t
transfer to a legitimate school…or even to another bogus school.
Accreditation is
supposed to make college work transferrable. Accreditors get paid lots of money
to do this job, as well as make sure the colleges are legitimate. Accreditors
took the money, but did not do any aspect of their job.
Hey, Feds! Hold
accreditation responsible for legitimizing bogus schools. Because of the
regional monopoly of accreditation, simply shutting down accreditors (right
now) would be problematic…but find the people responsible for legitimizing
these schools, and claw back money from them, too.
Corinthian’s
example is also motivating the Federal government to focus on for-profit
schools. Hey, nothing wrong with that, but let’s be a bit more efficient here.
UNC’s 18 year long
fraud scandal shows that state universities have been getting away with the
financial murder of our kids for a very long time. It’s pretty obvious that many people
graduate with worthless degrees. Even
non-profit schools are quite capable of systemic plunder.
Hey, Uncle Sam!
Don’t just make the people at for-profits accountable for their fraud…realize
what’s going on at for-profits is going on at many of our state and non-profit
schools. You want to claw back money from those guys, too.
Corinthian wasn’t
actually targeted for its worthless degrees, incidentally. It was targeted for
low graduation rates, and high defaults. The article only hints at where those
low graduation rates were coming from:
“…should
discourage bad behavior like growth at all costs since the company will have to show it has the money
to reach the scale it desires.”
Our institutions
of higher education, of all types, are focused on growth over everything else.
It’s why a state college with a 0.6%
graduation rate over a decade is still considered successful, because
it achieved great growth during that decade: that the growth was achieved by
enrolling anyone with a pulse (even though
25%, perhaps more, of those students are scammers), and
loading them up with student loan and Pell Grant fraud money—admin still gets
great pay raises for growth, no matter how many fake students have signed up.
Admin: “We
have over 1,000 students taking our night courses.”
Me: “How
come we have only a dozen cars in the parking lot on nights where classes are
held?”
--I didn’t
ask that last question, but the school wasn’t on a bus route or anything like
that. Granted, I asked that question after “check day” (i.e., the day that
students get their checks for signing up for college), but the fact remains,
anyone with eyeballs could tell we really didn’t have a lot of students there
for the education…
The Feds will
foolishly start expecting higher graduation rates. This isn’t going to work—all
a fake school has to do is just mail the diplomas to students that never show
up on campus. Accreditation
doesn’t care about even this level of fraud. Even though standards have
been reduced to the point that many
classes have no requirements now, no reading, no writing, no studying, no
nothing, graduation rates are still low because fake schools often
have many fake students—once they get the loan check (minus tuition), they’re
gone. It’s tough to graduate those kinds of students, but I’m sure if Feds
require it, it’ll happen. There’s nothing to stop a college graduate from
re-enrolling, and playing the student loan scam game again at a different
school, by the way.
While my previous
suggestions about how to effectively punish fraudulent schools are pretty
obvious, the suggestion for dealing with low graduation rates is a bit more
subtle:
Restrict
admissions.
Right now, our fastest
growing (and, typically, most fraudulent) schools get their students by
promising various levels of easy, convenient, and fun. I don’t have a problem
with people doing easy, convenient, or fun things, but that’s not what effective
higher education is, or ever was supposed to be (ok, maybe fun, but only if you
really enjoy studying 1,000 page books on history, splitting subatomic
particles, or similar esoteric things).
The Feds should
force legitimate entrance requirements, you know, like
accreditation used to require before it became corrupted.
I know, asking the
Feds to set entrance requirements is pretty silly, but right now many schools
have no requirements for entrance, indirectly forcing no requirements in their
classes…I’m actually a little curious to see if the Feds can be worse than the nothing we have now.
I again
point out that non-accredited for-profit schools have entrance requirements…and
have graduation rates in the 90% range, providing money-back guarantees on
tuition. Meanwhile,
our open admission schools can’t break 30% no matter how low the standards. And many students can’t pay off the loans for the tuition…with
no chance of getting their money back no matter how fraudulent their coursework.
The unaccredited
schools can guarantee jobs to their graduates, while our accredited schools
can’t seem to do much beyond guarantee a lifetime of debt.
Right now, the Feds are thinking about
clawing back money from the institutions that have been ripping off our
citizens, and planning to have some graduation rate standards. These plans
won’t work, and will likely do even more harm to our already deeply troubled
higher education system.
I doubt the Feds would
even consider my more realistic fixes, above. If they’d at least stop the
student loan scam while they try to figure out how to stop the fraud, that
would stop creating millions of victims a year.
I bet that’s not
going to be considered, either.
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