U.S. Senate report questions for-profit schools’ approach to vets on GI Bill

Career College Central Summary:

  • A report released recently casts some pretty unfavorable light on the for-profit college and university industry and its continued pursuit of student veterans using their GI Bill benefits.
  • The report from the U.S. Senate’s Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, “Is the New G.I. Bill Working?” says bluntly, “The fact that so many veterans are continuing to enroll in high-cost, for-profit colleges with questionable outcomes raises questions regarding whether aggressive deceptive and misleading marketing efforts are continuing.”
  • Although overall student enrollment has fallen at each of the eight top for-profit G.I. Bill schools, their enrollment of veterans has dramatically increased during the same period.
  • The percentage of veterans attending public college had dropped precipitously, from 62 percent in 2009 to just 50 percent in 2013. During the same period, the percentage of veterans enrolling in for-profit colleges rose from 23 to 31 percent of total enrollees, the report, released in July, found.
  • This is as taxpayers pay twice as much on average to send a veteran to a for-profit college compared with a public college or university.
  • In a statement, the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, the leading trade group of for-profit colleges, called the report “the result of a flawed process that has unfairly targeted private-sector schools and their students.”

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STAR TRIBUNE

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