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A Widening For-Profit College Job Placement Scandal?

Can the job placement rates that for-profit college companies report to prospective students and regulators be trusted? While this question has long dogged the sector, it has taken on a special urgency recently as reports of abuses have mounted.

Late last week, the publicly-traded for-profit higher education company Career Education Corporation that it has discovered 鈥渋mproper practices鈥 at 鈥渃ertain鈥 of its health professional schools related to how they determine their job placement rates. Company officials did not disclose the nature of the problems, which they said they found while preparing a response to a subpoena from the New York attorney general. But the violations were serious enough to prompt the company to hire an outside law firm 鈥渢o review the determination of student placements鈥 at its more than 80 U.S campuses.

鈥淚 can assure that the independent investigation will be thorough,鈥 Gary McCullough, the company鈥檚 president and chief executive officer told the analysts during .

The news from Career Education Corp. came just days after the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) announced its intention to of another for-profit school chain, ATI Enterprises, to operate in the state because it found that the company has engaged in a systematic effort to mislead students and regulators about its record in placing graduates into jobs.  [Update: On Tuesday, ATI announced that it had that would allow its schools to continue operating in the state with 鈥渃onditional approval,鈥 while at the same time shutting down about two dozen programs they offer.]

As , the commission took this action after an independent accounting firm that had been hired to verify ATI鈥檚 job placement rates found that 90 percent of the company鈥檚 programs in the state had 鈥 for the 2010 fiscal year, and that 63 percent had actual rates below the 60 percent threshold that TWC requires schools to meet. The firm also discovered that some of the schools鈥 programs had contacted fewer than 11 percent of their former students to confirm whether or not these individuals were working in a job related to their training.

Neither the commission nor the firm showed exactly how ATI schools had falsified their job placement rates. But during , the interviewed former ATI employees who said that career service advisors at the schools often created fake employment records and forged former students鈥 signatures onto them. While ATI has , the company denies that there have been widespread abuses.

ATI and Career Education Corp. are hardly the only for-profit higher education companies that have been accused lately of cooking the books on their job placement rates. Others include:

  • Education Management Corporation: Last September, a career service advisor at EDMC鈥檚 Art Institute of Pittsburgh about tricks she said the country鈥檚 second largest for-profit higher education company plays to inflate its job placement numbers. Kathleen Bittel, who has since left the company, revealed that graduates have to work for only one day to be considered successfully placed. She said that the company also puts tremendous pressure on employees to persuade students to verify that they are working in the fields in which they trained even when it鈥檚 abundantly clear that they aren鈥檛.  鈥淚f one could convince [these graduates] that they were using these 鈥榮kills鈥 at least 25% of the time in their current job, and to sign the employment form stating so, then their job could be counted as field related employment,鈥 she stated. In addition, she said that it is not uncommon for career service advisors 鈥渢o manipulate information received from a student, to ensure that the student could be listed as 鈥榞ainfully employed鈥 for the purposes of the company鈥檚 statistics.鈥 For example, when graduates report earnings that are too low to be included in the lists, advisors often delete the records, and create new ones using average salary data they obtain from the website Salary.com. EDMC has repeatedly .
  • Corinthian Colleges: In October, an internal Corinthian Colleges investigation that found that administrators at one of its Everest College campuses in Texas had falsified the employment records of 288 graduates over four years. Of these former students, 176 purportedly worked for a sham company — created by a friend of the school鈥檚 career services director — that did not have any employees. The other 119 were listed as working for a company that only employed seven Everest College students. Corinthian Colleges to the Texas Workforce Commission and fired the 鈥渞ogue鈥 employees who had been involved with the falsifications. The job placement issue has been a sensitive one for Corinthian since 2007, when the California Attorney General filed accusing the company鈥檚 schools of deliberately and persistently misleading prospective students about their rates. The case was , and Corinthian did not admit to any wrongdoing.

At Higher Ed Watch, we believe that all of these allegations and findings of abuse around job placement rates should raise red flags for regulators. This is certainly an issue that is ripe for the attention of the the for-profit higher education industry. Meanwhile, the Department of Education needs to launch its own investigation to determine whether this type of misconduct is widespread throughout the industry and, if so, hold schools accountable for engaging in it. New regulations that went into effect last month give Education Department officials expanded authority to crack down on schools that mislead students into enrolling. They should not hesitate to use it.

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Stephen Burd
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Stephen Burd

Senior Writer & Editor, Higher Education

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A Widening For-Profit College Job Placement Scandal?