| CAREERS NOW 11-08-09 |
| What's Really Up with Online Study Scholarships |
DEAR JOYCE: I must have landed on an Internet marketing list because I receive
so many e-mails pitching my chances to win a scholarship to an online college. Like: "Hey mom, apply for a
full-tuition scholarship, earn your degree and have a career!" Are these scholarships for real? - B.R.
A few people will win these scholarships, but the advertised financial-aid awards are really hooks cast by companies
in the lead-aggregation industry. They're marketing ploys.
Notice that virtually all the schools offering these scholarships are for-profit colleges. Higher education experts
tell me that on average, online for-profit colleges cost three times more than online nonprofit colleges.
Here' the inside story. Lead-generating marketers require scholarship seekers to provide their personal information
on a scholarship application - in reality a "lead form." The marketers aggregate the forms and sell them
to participating schools at a price of up to $100 per qualified lead. It's little wonder that you're receiving
so many scholarship pitches.
The next step happens when scholarship hopefuls are contacted by sales reps under the guise of following up on
their "scholarship application."
You know the rest: The marketers aren't matching students to free scholarships; they're collecting and selling
leads for educational enrollments. This is the way almost all online college directory companies work.
Upshot: Hundreds of thousands of people fill out so-called scholarship application forms, hoping to win. Most of
them will be rewarded with telephone marketers attempting to enroll them as paying students.
OTHER ONLINE ED ISSUES. Interest is growing in renewed education as a tool to improve job security in a
changing economy. That's why would-be learners should be aware of a related development - the robust return of
degree mills.
Degree mills are run by people who hawk worthless degrees and certificates - such as, "Get a law degree from
Harvard by return mail." Today's rash of phony educational documents are mostly being sold online. (Yes, employers
usually discover the fakes later if not immediately, and people do get fired for falsifying their educational backgrounds.)
Anyone with the cash qualifies for a degree-mill award. Even pets qualify.
Chester is a cute little pug dog in Vermont. His owner, Vicky Phillips, who is one of the nation's leading experts
on educational fraud, paid $499 on the pug's behalf to an online university. As a result, Chester was awarded an
MBA (master's degree in business administration).
Chester's alma mater is one of many online universities operating from foreign post office boxes, advertising fast
diplomas for a flat fee.
Accreditation? The pug's university says it is accredited by two agencies that, unfortunately for Chester's future
outlook, are not recognized as an accrediting agency or association by either the U.S. Department of Education,
or by the Council of Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA).
So what? For a number of good reasons, proper accreditation is a very big deal in choosing where you'll study.
Accreditation assures you that the institution meets at least minimum established standards of quality.
Proper accreditation isn't foolproof, but without it, you risk an outcome of gaining neither an education nor a
usable credential. The issue is complex but here's how to get it straight before sinking into shady educational
offers: Visit the CHEA site, chea.org. On the left screen, click on Degree Mills and Accreditation Mills. Although
the reading's a bit dry, the information can save you a world of regret.
So how well did Chester do as a college student? His degree came with a grade point average of 3.19. Had Phillips
paid the online university an additional $100, the pug could have graduated with honors.
Chester's educational whirl is detailed on GetEducated.com, "Pug Dog Gets Online MBA."
Email Joyce
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