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In this podcast episode, Dr. Drumm McNaughton speaks with Director Camille Dumont of the Center for Career and Professional Development (CCPD) about how she aligned career services with academia at Post University to better prepare students for the workforce. I was a healthcare administrator. Learn more at changinghighered.com.
Franklin University, which primarily serves non-traditional, part-time adult learners, offers a unique perspective on higher education growth. “Backing into Costs” for Tuition Decker emphasizes that pricing in higher education should go beyond an institution’s needs. About Our Podcast Guest Dr. David R.
Image: The University of Arkansas System is considering a transaction in which it would transform the for-profitUniversity of Phoenix into an independent nonprofit affiliate, spokespeople for both institutions have confirmed. It could be.”
Students who took out loans to attend the for-profitUniversity of Phoenix under the belief that the school offered them unique job opportunities at top organizations will have their debt forgiven, the Biden administration announced Wednesday. Doing so may be challenging.
In the midst of President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court defense of student loan relief, the Department of Education formally announced it would personally pursue leaders of for-profit institutions to pay unanswered debts their institution incurred from reckless spending and non-compliance with federally allocated financial aid dollars.
I can write about big trends that will affect education. That has worked in the past because, frankly, the education markets haven’t changed much or quickly. Talk from universities. Will the continuous education approach be taken up more broadly by a wider range of industries? Education isn’t one of them.
The implications of President-elect Donald Trump regaining the helm of the Department of Education have catalyzed many predictions and fears of how higher education will fare in 2025. In the face of such uncertainty, college and university leaders may feel compelled to sit tight and assess the climate.
In other words, institutions are competing for a shrinking pool of students, and it costs more for an education that some feel isnt worth the money spent or debt incurred. This not completely changed, even with the change in administration. Mergers arent the only solution to this problem.
This podcast, Higher Ed Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) Activity with Gerry Czarnecki and Dr. Drumm McNaughton, drills down on higher-than-historical activity and discusses things university presidents should consider before a merger. The higher education sector has been relatively immune (or perhaps resistant?)
The polarization of Higher Education isn’t entirely new. Unfortunately, higher education isnt immune to this conflict Policymakers, faculty, students, outside agitators, and college athletes all have stepped up to voice their concerns among the ivy-covered walls and ivory towers of higher education.
Department of Education that it is imposing a $37 million fine on Grand Canyon based on similar allegations. Grand Canyon in 2018 had restructured itself into two entities: a non-profit college, GCU, and a for-profit company, Grand Canyon Education (GCE), that gets paid to provide a range of services to the school.
Many can be directly attributed to the decertification of ACICS by the Obama administration. However, the more relevant reason for many of these closures is the lifecycle and current operating environment of higher education. Over the past few years, 65 for-profits closed and seven merged with other institutions.
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