For-profit universities and colleges

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    Loyola University Chicago is a Jesuit institution that promotes caring for others, caring for one’s self, and caring for the community. It is one of Loyola’s foundational aspect of caring for the community that has made the requirement of engaged learning a part of the curriculum. Since the Fall of 2012, Loyola has required its students to go out into the world and obtain hands-on experience in different sorts of fields. One may accomplish this through an internship course, or a class combined…

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    Why For-Profit Colleges Aren’t What You’d Expect Few things give Americans more stress than college; decisions regarding higher education can be some of the most difficult. Recently, an increasing number of people have been choosing to attend for-profit universities such as University of Phoenix or Corinthian Colleges. These schools offer incentives that tend to appeal to people of middle to lower income level, yet they cost much more that attending a traditional nonprofit school. In his…

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    What Is the True Cost of For-Profit Schools? It was a typical Thursday night for 29 year-old Dane Lockman. The single father had just put his son to bed and was flipping through late night infomercials, looking for something to pike his interest. Suddenly, a captivating advertisement for Westwood College of Atlanta filled the screen. As Dane listened to the sales pitch, he felt the burning desire to pick up the phone and call the number on the screen. He could do this! He could be the first…

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    Going to college has become the new trend and its attendance has been increasing for quite some time now. Everybody is doing it—yes, that includes women, minorities, and all social classes. In the United States, we have a variety of college types that can be attended for all different types of people and educational opportunities. What I am going to discuss is if there is really a “better option” of the type of school everyone should be aiming to go to. Which college, a community college,…

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    In the article “Leveling the Field”, Christopher Beha goes undercover as a college student at the University of Phoenix and makes effective claims about the corrupt nature of these institutions and the increasing push for degree attainment by the American government. He reports his experience at the University of Phoenix and how he started to question the integrity of the concept. He addresses the origins of the college and how it has evolved from its original intent. Beha makes his claim by…

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    For-Profit College

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    Is Higher Education Worth The Price? In this response paper I will mainly response to two articles, they are Are College Worth the Price of Admission? By Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus, and Why Do You Think They’re Called For-Profit Colleges? By Kevin Carey. Besides these two articles, I also want to response to the topic Is Higher Education Worth the Price? first. When I first saw the title of this chapter, I was immediately attracted. This is the question I have been searching for answer…

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    Retention There are many strategies that colleges and universities utilize to attract students to their schools (College Recruitment Practices, 2016). The literature outlines many ways that colleges and universities market themselves from direct visits of college staff to high school campuses, direct mailing, calling students, recruitment websites and offering college visits are just a few of the ways colleges attract student. Elite colleges and universities will have no shortage of…

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    questions in sports is if college athletes deserved to be paid or not. Many people view student athletes competing in the NCAA as professional athletes and athletes in every other league receive money. While, others have a different opinion. Tubby Smith and Gary Smith are authors of a sports article discussing why they believe college athletes should not get paid. In Tubby Smith’s article “Is It Time To Start Paying College Athletes?”, he states his hesitations about colleges paying their…

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    Postsecondary Degrees

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    Students of for-profit colleges are only 11% of America’s higher education population yet they account for 44% of federal student loan defaults because the value of their degree makes them the least desirable to be hired by employers (Harvard Law Review, 2015). This is also a product of aggressive recruiting techniques that target military members by offering a fast, convenient path towards an accredited degree. As it turns out, a degree awarded from a for-profit or “degree mill” university…

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    As time progresses, university diplomas are required for work as they are getting more and more competitive. There has been a huge increase in numbers on how many Americans have enrolled in university. Graduates that began college a few years later specify that “instead of reducing inequality, our system of higher education reinforces it.” Because of this, universities are making the cost of their schools more expensive. By 2034, universities are supposed to go up to 34 percent. Median class…

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