• RampageDon
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    8 months ago

    So they are getting hit with cost of business. 100k students with 78% being affected, 50k tuition that is actually 25% more than advertised.

    (78,000 students)(50,000 tution)(.25) = 975million they made just from extra fees tricking those students. A 38 million fine should be on top of the 975million they pay back for conning people. Why would they stop when they make money off of this?

  • ares35@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    they aren’t your run-of-the-mill church-affiliated liberal arts college or university, which are predominately non-profit entities…

    these bastards are for profit. their business is scamming students.

  • stolid_agnostic
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    8 months ago

    Can people just finally stop enrolling in for-profit institutions? They are all dirty like this.

  • HowMany
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    8 months ago

    You’d think as much money as god makes that he’d make his colleges free.

  • TheForkOfDamocles@beehaw.org
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    8 months ago

    No surprise whatsoever. They ramped up their spending on ads probably 100x about 10 years ago. They bought a basketball star for a coach, sold naming rights to their sports complex—newly built and upgraded—and leveraged that into widespread billboards and commercials.

    Aside: I taught in Phoenix at the time and every graduate from GCU in my subject area without fail was ill-prepared yet supremely confident—a bad combination. It would seem, now that they’re nationwide online, a la University of Phoenix, they’ve become a diploma mill. They also really push the “christian university” angle hard to get into the pockets of those rubes.