Proprietary colleges

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Proprietary colleges are American for-profit colleges and universities. They are operated by their owners or investors, rather than a not-for-profit institution, religious organization, or state or local government. Sometimes a proprietary college may also overlap with the sector of non-degree granting business colleges.

Because of this profit motive, some such colleges have in the past been investigated for or been charged with illegally admitting students to falsely obtain government financial aid.[1] [2] However, traditional colleges have also had this problem.[3] [4] Legislation has tightened considerably the parameters for getting financial aid in recent years.[citation needed] In most cases, degree-granting colleges with accreditation from an agency that is recognized by the U.S. Department of Education and is authorized to distribute Title IV student financial aid must meet exacting standards. Students wishing to attend a proprietary college should consider the institution's accreditation. It is also typical that a majority of students attending proprietary colleges receive some form of government financial aid, such as Pell Grants and student loans.

Contents

List of proprietary colleges

Classification

Proprietary colleges are sometimes called career colleges, business colleges, proprietary schools, institutes, or for-profit colleges. The term preferred by the New York State-based Association for Proprietary Colleges is Proprietary colleges.[5]

Kevin Kinser, assistant professor of educational administration and policy at the University at Albany, has proposed a "Multidimensional classification" scheme of for-profit higher education.[6] Kinser's classes of proprietary colleges are organized by these criteria:

1. Geographic scope:

  • "Neighorhood" - close geographic proximity, in a single state
  • "Regional" - two or more campuses in neighboring states
  • "National" - including in states across the United States and virtual colleges

2. Ownership dimension:

  • "Publicly traded" corporations
  • Family-owned "enterprise institution(s)"
  • "Venture institutions" held by private investors

3. Highest degree granted:

References

See also

External links


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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