http://chronicle.com/article/Why-Do-You-Think-Theyre/123660/
July 25, 2010
Why Do You Think They're Called For-Profit Colleges?

Michael Morgenstern for The Chronicle

By Kevin Carey

Michael Clifford believes that education is the only path to world 
peace. He never went to college, but sometimes he calls himself 
"Doctor." Jerry Falwell is one of his heroes. Clifford has made millions 
of dollars from government programs but doesn't seem to see the windfall 
that way. Improbably, he has come to symbolize the contradictions at the 
heart of the growing national debate over for-profit higher education.

Until recently, for-profits were mostly mom-and-pop trade schools. 
Twenty years ago, a series of high-profile Congressional hearings, led 
by Senator Sam Nunn, revealed widespread fraud in the industry, and the 
resulting reforms almost wiped the schools out. But they hung on and 
returned with a vengeance in the form of publicly traded giants like the 
University of Phoenix.

Entrepreneurs like Clifford, meanwhile, have been snapping up dying 
nonprofit colleges and quickly turning them into money-making machines.

Most of that money comes from the federal government, in the form of 
Pell Grants and subsidized student loans. Phoenix alone is on pace to 
reap $1-billion from Pell Grants this year, along with $4-billion from 
federal loans. A quarter of all federal aid goes to for-profits, while 
they enroll only 10 percent of students.

Unfortunately, a large and growing number of graduates of for-profit 
colleges are having trouble paying those loans back. Horror stories of 
aggressive recruiters' inducing students to take out huge loans for 
nearly worthless degrees are filling the news. The Obama administration, 
flush with victory after vanquishing the student-loan industry this 
year, has proposed cutting off federal aid to for-profits that saddle 
students with unmanageable debt. Congress has rolled out the TV cameras 
for a new round of hearings that are putting for-profits on the hot 
seat. One observer called the event "the Nunn hearings on steroids."

The new scrutiny of for-profits is welcome. Without oversight, the 
combination of government subsidies and financially unsophisticated 
consumers guarantees outright fraud or programs that, while technically 
legitimate, are so substandard that the distinction of legitimacy has no 
meaning. For-profit owners and advocates have a hard time admitting that.

I spoke with Michael Clifford recently as he was driving down the 
California coast to meet with a higher-education charity he runs. He's 
an interesting man—sincere, optimistic, a true believer in higher 
education and his role as a force for good. A musician and born-again 
Christian, he learned at the knee of the University of Phoenix's 
founder, John Sperling. In 2004, Clifford led the sale of a destitute 
Baptist institution called Grand Canyon University to investors. Six 
years later, enrollment has increased substantially, much of it online. 
The ownership company started selling shares to the public in 2008 and 
is worth nearly $1-billion today, making Clifford a wealthy man. He has 
since repeated the formula elsewhere, partnering with notables like 
General Electric's former chief executive, Jack Welch. Some of the 
colleges that Clifford has purchased have given him honorary degrees 
(thus "Doctor" Michael Clifford).

Clifford will concede, in the abstract, to abuses in the for-profit 
industry. But he rejects the Obama administration's proposal to cut off 
federal aid to for-profits at which student-debt payments after 
graduation exceed a certain percentage of the graduates' income. In 
fact, he denies that colleges have any responsibility whatsoever for how 
much students borrow and whether they can pay it back. He won't even 
acknowledge that student borrowing is related to how much colleges charge.

That refusal is the industry line, and it is crazy nonsense. As a rule, 
for-profits charge much more than public colleges and universities. Many 
of their students come from moderate- and low-income backgrounds. You 
don't need a college degree to know that large debt plus small income 
equals high risk of default. The for-profit Corinthian Colleges (as of 
mid-July, market cap: $923-million) estimated in official documents 
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission that more than half 
the loans it makes to its own students will go bad. Corinthian still 
makes a profit, because it gets most of its money from loans guaranteed 
by Uncle Sam.

Other industry officials, like the for-profit lobbyist Harris Miller, 
would have you believe that government money that technically passes 
through the hands of students on its way from the public treasury to the 
for-profit bottom line isn't a government subsidy at all. In that 
regard, for-profits lately have been trying to rebrand themselves as 
"market based" higher education. To understand how wrong this is, look 
no further than the "90/10 rule," a federal rule that bars for-profits 
from receiving more than 90 percent of their revenue from federal aid. 
The fact that the rule exists at all, and that Miller is working to 
water it down (it used to be the 85/15 rule), shows that for-profits 
operate in nothing like a subsidy-free market.

The federal government has every right to regulate the billions of 
taxpayer dollars it is pouring into the pockets of for-profit 
shareholders. The sooner abusive colleges are prevented from loading 
students with crushing debt in exchange for low-value degrees, the better.

But that doesn't mean for-profit higher education is inherently bad. The 
reputable parts of the industry are at the forefront of much 
technological and organizational innovation. For-profits exist in large 
part to fix educational market failures left by traditional 
institutions, and they profit by serving students that public and 
private nonprofit institutions too often ignore. While old-line research 
universities were gilding their walled-off academic city-states, the 
University of Phoenix was building no-frills campuses near freeway exits 
so working students could take classes in the evening. Who was more 
focused on the public interest? Some of the colleges Clifford bought 
have legacies that stretch back decades. Who else was willing to save 
them? Not the government, or the church, or the more fortunate colleges 
with their wealthy alumni and endowments that reach the sky.

The for-profit Kaplan University recently struck a deal with the 
California community-college system to provide courses that the bankrupt 
public colleges cannot. The president of the system's faculty senate 
objected: The deal was not "favorable to faculty," she said. Whose fault 
is that? Kaplan, or the feckless voters and incompetent politicians who 
have driven California to ruin?

Wal-Mart recently announced a deal with the for-profit American Public 
University to teach the giant retailer's employees. What ambitious 
president or provost is planning to make her reputation educating 
$9-an-hour cashiers?

Traditional institutions tend to respond to such ventures by indicting 
the quality of for-profit degrees. The trouble is, they have very little 
evidence beyond the real issue of default rates to prove it. That's 
because traditional institutions have long resisted subjecting 
themselves to any objective measures of academic quality. They've 
pointed instead to regional accreditation, which conveniently allows 
colleges to decide for themselves whether they're doing a good job.

But many for-profit institutions have regional accreditation, too. 
That's what people like Clifford are buying when they invest in troubled 
colleges. Accreditation has become like a taxicab medallion, available 
for bidding on the open market. As a result, long-established public and 
private nonprofit colleges are left with no standards with which to make 
the case against their for-profit competitors. At one recent 
Congressional hearing, the Senate education committee's chairman, Tom 
Harkin, said of the for-profits, "We don't know how many students 
graduate, how many get jobs, how schools that are not publicly traded 
spend their [federal] dollars, and how many for-profit students default 
over the long term." All true—and just as true when the words "for 
profit" are removed. There's no doubt that the worst for-profits are 
ruthlessly exploiting the commodified college degree. But they didn't 
commodify it in the first place.

For-profits fill a void left by traditional institutions that once 
believed their world was constant. Fast-developing methods of teaching 
students over the Internet have given the velocity of change a turbo 
boost. In such a volatile situation, all kinds of unexpected people make 
their way into the picture. And once they get there, they tend to stick 
around. Traditional institutions hoping that Congress will rid them of 
for-profit competition will very likely be disappointed.

Kevin Carey is policy director of Education Sector, an independent think 
tank in Washington.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to