AAPL stock: $443.77 ( +2.42 ) *Cached every 60 seconds. For live updating, Click Here |
| Tips and Deals ---- 'Friendly' Political Ranting |
| "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Ted King
Date: July 30, 2012 09:59AM
|
Quote
Bachelor’s programs cost an average of 20 percent more [than public colleges], and associate’s programs an average of quadruple public school tuition. This isn’t too surprising when you look at how for-profit colleges are spending their money. The Harkin report found that 22.7 percent of revenue at for-profits goes to marketing and recruitment, that for-profits have an average profit margin of 19.7 percent, and pay an average of $7.3 million a year to their chief executives. That’s all money that drives up tuition without going to educational programming. Actual instruction made up a paltry 17.2 percent of expenses.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: cbelt3
Date: July 30, 2012 10:08AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Acer
Date: July 30, 2012 10:20AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 10:21AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: mattkime
Date: July 30, 2012 10:44AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Speedy
Date: July 30, 2012 11:16AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 11:23AM
|
Quote
mattkime
>>Nonprofit simply means you spent all you made.
Not at all true. They are different legal entities. This impacts the structure and function of the institution.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 30, 2012 11:23AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 11:27AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: mattkime
Date: July 30, 2012 11:59AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: cbelt3
Date: July 30, 2012 12:10PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 12:22PM
|
Quote
mattkime
Quote
Avenger
Can you be more specific? My place of work is a nonprofit and there are a zillion places they can put their money away.
none of those places are investor or shareholder pockets.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: mattkime
Date: July 30, 2012 12:29PM
|
Quote
Avenger
Quote
mattkime
Quote
Avenger
Can you be more specific? My place of work is a nonprofit and there are a zillion places they can put their money away.
none of those places are investor or shareholder pockets.
There you go with your vendetta. What is the difference? Students and parents aren't getting it back. In a true non-profit model they would. The money is stashed away and called endowment, emergency fund or whatever.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 30, 2012 12:37PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Ted King
Date: July 30, 2012 12:59PM
|
Quote
$tevie
Sadly, I think for-profit colleges are going to affect the non-profit colleges because for-profits can "buy" students right out from under a non-profit. It's all about the numbers.

Quote
For-profit schools enroll far more high- dollar borrowers. Fifty-seven percent of Bachelor’s students who graduate from a for-profit college owe $30,000 or more. In contrast, 25 percent of those who earned degrees in the private, non-profit sector and 12 percent from the public sector borrowed at this level.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 30, 2012 01:08PM
|
We've had a for-profit school call students who've been accepted and offer them $5,000 off their retail price, so to speak, to come to that school. Like being at a yard sale or something.| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 01:13PM
|
Quote
$tevie
Well, since everyone insists on quoting Dakota I can see he is tragically confused as usual.
A non-profit is an organization which is non-profit-distributing, that is, not returning profits to their owners or directors.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 30, 2012 01:16PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 01:21PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Mac-A-Matic
Date: July 30, 2012 05:00PM
|
Quote
$tevie
I work for a non-profit institution and am used to for-profits being vilified so it's interesting to have some data to back up the emotional reactions.We've had a for-profit school call students who've been accepted and offer them $5,000 off their retail price, so to speak, to come to that school. Like being at a yard sale or something.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 30, 2012 05:27PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 30, 2012 07:47PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Mac-A-Matic
Date: July 30, 2012 11:48PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 31, 2012 01:06AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: RgrF
Date: July 31, 2012 03:23AM
|
Quote
$tevie
I don't know how to explain it right, I guess.
I am a student. I say, thank you but I have chosen to attend Artsy Fartsy U instead of Dollar Sign Institute. Whereupon Dollar Sign Institute says, what if we lob $5,000 off the tuition? So the student goes back to Artsy Fartsy U and says, Dollar Sign just slashed another $5,000 off my tuition. To which Artsy Fartsy has no comeback because they do not have the means to arbitrarily lower someone's tuition.
Scholarship packages are carefully worked out based on merit and need and the college's ability to cover the student's tuition via money assigned for that purpose. Also on how many students are coming who are paying full freight which helps grease the wheels, too. There isn't any cash lying around to cover such a spontaneous and costly sales technique.
Just suddenly slashing prices as if it was a President's Day Sale is not the same thing as a financial aid package.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Mac-A-Matic
Date: July 31, 2012 09:34AM
|
Quote
$tevie
I don't know how to explain it right, I guess.
I am a student. I say, thank you but I have chosen to attend Artsy Fartsy U instead of Dollar Sign Institute. Whereupon Dollar Sign Institute says, what if we lob $5,000 off the tuition? So the student goes back to Artsy Fartsy U and says, Dollar Sign just slashed another $5,000 off my tuition. To which Artsy Fartsy has no comeback because they do not have the means to arbitrarily lower someone's tuition.
Quote
$tevie
Scholarship packages are carefully worked out based on merit and need and the college's ability to cover the student's tuition via money assigned for that purpose. Also on how many students are coming who are paying full freight which helps grease the wheels, too. There isn't any cash lying around to cover such a spontaneous and costly sales technique.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 31, 2012 10:12AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 31, 2012 10:52AM
|
Quote
RgrF
Quote
$tevie
I don't know how to explain it right, I guess.
I am a student. I say, thank you but I have chosen to attend Artsy Fartsy U instead of Dollar Sign Institute. Whereupon Dollar Sign Institute says, what if we lob $5,000 off the tuition? So the student goes back to Artsy Fartsy U and says, Dollar Sign just slashed another $5,000 off my tuition. To which Artsy Fartsy has no comeback because they do not have the means to arbitrarily lower someone's tuition.
Scholarship packages are carefully worked out based on merit and need and the college's ability to cover the student's tuition via money assigned for that purpose. Also on how many students are coming who are paying full freight which helps grease the wheels, too. There isn't any cash lying around to cover such a spontaneous and costly sales technique.
Just suddenly slashing prices as if it was a President's Day Sale is not the same thing as a financial aid package.
So if an academically ineligible student with superior or just above average athletic skills were to appear at your doorstep, seeking admission, what would do?
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Mac-A-Matic
Date: July 31, 2012 11:22AM
|
Quote
$tevie
Our scholarships come from donors who specify the money go to scholarships and endowments set up for scholarships and of course some stuudents get scholarships from outside sources like state senatorial scholarships or local scholarship awards. And so on.
I can't figure out what you are driving at. We have no "Exxon scholarship" or "McDonalds scholarship" if that's where you are trying to take this.
Quote
$tevie
Scenario: The admission process is finished all over the country. All the colleges and universities have admitted the students of their choice, and offered financial aid packages to the students who require them. It's all over. All that is left is for the students to choose from among the colleges which have accepted them. It's over and done with.
BUT suddenly, after a student HAS decided and informed the college of their choice that they have chosen THEM, this for-profit college calls (weeks after the entire process is done and laid to rest) and says, Don't go there, go here. Here's $5,000 out of the blue to sweeten the pot.
Does that explain it better?
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: July 31, 2012 12:14PM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Avenger
Date: July 31, 2012 12:43PM
|
Quote
$tevie
BUT suddenly, after a student HAS decided and informed the college of their choice that they have chosen THEM, this for-profit college calls (weeks after the entire process is done and laid to rest) and says, Don't go there, go here. Here's $5,000 out of the blue to sweeten the pot.
Does that explain it better?
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Mac-A-Matic
Date: August 01, 2012 08:01AM
|
Quote
$tevie
We have a budget for each fiscal year and part of that budget is for financial aid. Yes, that yearly allotment can and is depleted. We have found work arounds in emergency situations such as 2008 when so many parents lost their shirts but it required raiding other parts of our budgets and was frankly painful.
Also, we are not going to start playing games like that. It is, as they say, a slippery slope and we can't start raiding other budget lines to play it.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: August 01, 2012 09:59AM
|
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: $tevie
Date: August 01, 2012 05:42PM
|
[www.mikulski.senate.gov]Quote
Under a loophole in federal financial aid laws, schools that are institutionally accredited may offer individual programs that lack state licensing or programmatic accreditation, even when they are required in order for their graduates to enter the occupation they were prepared for. Students enter these programs believing that they are preparing for a job in that field, only to discover after graduating, often with heavy debt loads, that they are not qualified to work in that field or take an occupational exam. The Protecting Students from Worthless Degrees Act would require programs offered by institutions to meet any state licensure requirements and programmatic accreditation that is necessary for entering an occupation in order to receive taxpayer-funded tuition such as Pell Grants, Stafford Loans, G.I. Bill benefits, or Department of Defense Tuition Assistance funds.
| Re: "For-profit colleges a terrible deal" Posted by: Lemon Drop
Date: August 02, 2012 02:39PM
|
Quote
$tevie
Mikulski, Harkin, Merkley Introduce Legislation to Stop Colleges from Peddling Worthless Degrees[www.mikulski.senate.gov]Quote
Under a loophole in federal financial aid laws, schools that are institutionally accredited may offer individual programs that lack state licensing or programmatic accreditation, even when they are required in order for their graduates to enter the occupation they were prepared for. Students enter these programs believing that they are preparing for a job in that field, only to discover after graduating, often with heavy debt loads, that they are not qualified to work in that field or take an occupational exam. The Protecting Students from Worthless Degrees Act would require programs offered by institutions to meet any state licensure requirements and programmatic accreditation that is necessary for entering an occupation in order to receive taxpayer-funded tuition such as Pell Grants, Stafford Loans, G.I. Bill benefits, or Department of Defense Tuition Assistance funds.
