Thursday, February 10, 2011

Schools Matter: For-Profits Draining Federal Education Funds and Leaving Students Broke and Empty-Handed

Schools Matter: For-Profits Draining Federal Education Funds and Leaving Students Broke and Empty-Handed

For-Profits Draining Federal Education Funds and Leaving Students Broke and Empty-Handed

Tamar Lewin at the NYTimes calls these predatory corporate diploma mills "commercial colleges." How quaint.

Think Progess has the real story:
The Education Department today released new data on the rate at which higher education students default on their student loans, which showed that students at for-profit colleges — schools like the University of Phoenix or Strayer University — are defaulting at rates far above those at other institutions. In fact, 25 percent of students who attend for profit colleges default within three years. Here’s a chart comparing default rates at different types of schools (the green bar represents defaults at private, for-profit schools).

Here are some more key facts about for-profit colleges:
Just 11 percent of higher education students in the country attend for-profit schools, yet they account for 26 percent of federal student loans and 44 percent of student loan defaults.
Many of the schools make up to ninety percent of their revenue from U.S.