ITT Tech Is Officially Closing (gizmodo.com) 420
Reader Joe_Dragon shares a Gizmodo report: ITT Technical Institute is officially closing all of its campuses following federal sanctions imposed against the company. The for-profit college announced the changes in a statement: "It is with profound regret that we must report that ITT Educational Services, Inc. will discontinue academic operations at all of its ITT Technical Institutes permanently after approximately 50 years of continuous service. With what we believe is a complete disregard by the U.S. Department of Education for due process to the company, hundreds of thousands of current students and alumni and more than 8,000 employees will be negatively affected."
ITT Tech announced it was closing all of its campuses just one week after it stopped enrolling students following a federal crackdown on for-profit colleges. ITT Tech and other higher education companies like it have been widely criticized for accepting billions of dollars in government grants and loans while failing to provide adequate job training for its students. Last year, ITT Tech received an estimated $580 million in federal money (aka taxpayer dollars), according to the Department of Education.
ITT Tech announced it was closing all of its campuses just one week after it stopped enrolling students following a federal crackdown on for-profit colleges. ITT Tech and other higher education companies like it have been widely criticized for accepting billions of dollars in government grants and loans while failing to provide adequate job training for its students. Last year, ITT Tech received an estimated $580 million in federal money (aka taxpayer dollars), according to the Department of Education.
Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:4, Informative)
So when are the FEDs going to shut down the big Universities? $180,000 of student loans and NO JOB prospects ... They aren't being honest either.
Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:5, Funny)
I went to ITT and now I write for Gizmodo. I applied to slashdot but I didn't have the errors per article count needed to be an editor
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Just write a 'script to add random apostrophe's' to the 's''s' in your article's.
Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:4, Funny)
I went to ITT and now I write for Gizmodo. I applied to slashdot but I didn't have the errors per article count needed to be an editor
I don't think that was the issue, the powers at be at slashdot can often be forgiving about missing errors. But did you make sure you made a dupe application? That's how you get past round one of the process...
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I had a job lined up before I graduated, 20 grand in debt later. I didn't wait until graduation to start applying, plus I don't have a degree in something like archaeology
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... plus I don't have a degree in something like archaeology
And that's why you don't get to do nifty things like fighting Nazis or collecting alien skulls.
What liberal arts actually means (Score:3, Insightful)
But a degree in Liberal Arts won't get me me a high paying job
Basically nobody has a degree in Liberal Arts [wikipedia.org]. Liberal arts is a group of subjects which includes many of the the STEM fields. If you have a degree in Physics you have a liberal arts degree. Same with Mathematics, Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Biology, plus of course Languages, Literature, Psychology, Philosophy, Social Sciences, Arts, and more.
Some liberal arts degrees are more valuable to employers than others but saying that liberal arts as a whole = no jobs is to misunderstand the term.
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But a degree in Liberal Arts won't get me me a high paying job
Basically nobody has a degree in Liberal Arts [wikipedia.org]. Liberal arts is a group of subjects which includes many of the the STEM fields. If you have a degree in Physics you have a liberal arts degree. Same with Mathematics, Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Biology, plus of course Languages, Literature, Psychology, Philosophy, Social Sciences, Arts, and more.
Some liberal arts degrees are more valuable to employers than others but saying that liberal arts as a whole = no jobs is to misunderstand the term.
The OP is probably confusing Liberal Arts with Liberal Studies. The former is a broad category of programs, the latter is exactly what it sounds like... Lots of courses in a lot of fields without digging much into any of them, and usually more in the humanities than the hard sciences.
Can't speak for your area, but in CA it seems like the most common profession for someone with a Liberal Studies degree is K-12 teacher (possibly with a specialization if they have additional study).
Re:What liberal arts actually means (Score:5, Insightful)
I hold a B.A. in computer science from a fairly good private college. One of my best friends graduated with a triple-major B.A. in physics, mathematics, and computer science, from the same institution. Other close friends from undergrad received B.A. degrees in chemistry, biology, geology, environmental science, and botany.
In fact, my undergrad alma mater doesn't offer the B.Sc. degree at all.
In 20 years in the software industry, not once has anyone ever asked whether I hold a B.A. or a B.Sc. It's a total nonissue. Some institutions offer the B.A., some offer the B.Sc., some offer both but differentiate them on how many differential calculus classes you've taken.
Re: What liberal arts actually means (Score:3)
Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:5, Interesting)
But a degree in Liberal Arts won't get me me a high paying job???????
You laugh, but even down here in the republic of Texas kids are being fed a boatload of lies, usually in the name of classroom economy. If I had a dollar for every time I heard "the nation's largest tech companies are demanding these skills" (group work, collaboration, well-rounded, etc.) I could retire and start my own school. What I hear when they say this is "we need to reduce teacher workload to shave some dollars off the budget", because all the things they say they won't do in class I find myself doing for my kids at home because 4 kids who don't know the alphabet can't teach each other the alphabet. I have no doubt the CEOs are saying these things, but I question their motives and perspective.
Normally they talk to fortune 500 CEOs, of which by definition, there are 500 in the world and they make hiring decisions only for the most senior executives. Those that they even see represent the very cream of the crop in terms of demonstrated results and pedigree which eliminates the vast majority of the world's population. You would be better off following your dream to pursue professional sports rather than pursue such positions, there are more employed pro-athletes. They are NOT talking to hiring managers and rank and file employees who actually make the hiring decisions for the majority of employees which is far more useful information for the vast majority of students. Unfortunately what they find might be expensive.
The net result is we have kids who have been force-fed bad information and have then made bad choices in their education based on that bad information. Be a collaborator, be a team player, be a leader, just pursue your dream, get a degree in anything etc. All horrible advice. Archaeology maybe your dream and you may passionately love it, definitely pursue it, but have a very viable backup plan of something that will net you a job with high probability and that you can live with. Very likely that is the job you will be doing while you wait for the archaeology position to open, possibly indefinitely. Also don't mention to prospective recruiters that your first love is archaeology but plumbing is a second choice: the odds that they will resonate with your dream are low, but the odds you get marked as "overqualified" (code for: will probably leave us for another job before we're ready) are very high.
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If I had a dollar for every time I heard "the nation's largest tech companies are demanding these skills" (group work, collaboration, well-rounded, etc.) I could retire and start my own school.
Well, being a university professor I've hear the same things, and you know, the companies are absolutely right. I think you're a bit too cynical. The reason they say these things ("we need engineers who can write and present and work well i groups") is that they do feel a real need, and also feel current graduates lacking in these respects.
However, that's always been the case. It's a pretty stable criticism. So then you have to figure out why. And the answer is very simple and I always point it out when I m
Simple rule (Score:2, Insightful)
There should be a simple rule, NO federal loans going to FOR PROFIT institutions. It does not make sense to give out federal loans to institutions that exist mainly to make money out of their students.
False equivilency (Score:5, Insightful)
So when are the FEDs going to shut down the big Universities? $180,000 of student loans and NO JOB prospects ... They aren't being honest either.
You do realize that you don't have to go to an expensive private university, right? Anyway if I go get a Harvard degree it will cost me a lot of money but I will in all likelihood have gotten an actual education along the way. You can argue that it isn't a good deal financially but you do get something at the end of the day. If you can't turn a Harvard degree into some sort of job you're doing it wrong. Comparing Harvard to or even a state university to ITT Tech is ridiculous.
Companies like ITT (I don't really think of them as schools) basically provide a near worthless degree which nobody respects and doesn't open doors. They do so knowing that a large percentage of their customers (students) will fail out. They exist to load credulous low income people with debt while failing to provide them a real education. They prey on people who probably really aren't the sort of people who are college material in the first place. College is great but it isn't the right path for everyone. Trade schools would serve many of them much better and there is a clear need for skilled trades.
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Part of the problem is that there's a push to put as many high school students into college (even 2-year college) as possible, even those who would be better served going to vocational schools.
Protip: You can't outsource blue collar work.
-uso.
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Protip: You can't outsource blue collar work.
That's what "temporary" employment visas are for.
Trades (Score:5, Insightful)
Part of the problem is that there's a push to put as many high school students into college (even 2-year college) as possible, even those who would be better served going to vocational schools.
I could not agree more. I have a staff full of people who are definitely not college material but would be (and are) served well by a vocational education. There is always a need for skilled trades, welders, machinists, etc. Trying to turn everyone into a computer programmers regardless of aptitude is just idiotic and counterproductive. Not to mention costly.
Protip: You can't outsource blue collar work.
Care to wager on that? Ask the folks who work the assembly lines in Detroit if blue collar work cannot be outsourced. There are plenty of blue collar jobs that are very vulnerable to outsourcing when you live in a place with high labor costs like the US.
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skilled trades, welders, machinists, etc
And those were great 19th & 20th century trades. The 21st century trades are IT, networking, programmers, etc. Part of what makes it hard to get modern trades started is people like most Slashdotters that insist programming requires a 4 year degree.
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Re:False equivilency (Score:5, Insightful)
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So when are the FEDs going to shut down the big Universities? $180,000 of student loans and NO JOB prospects ... They aren't being honest either.
You do realize that you don't have to go to an expensive private university, right? Anyway if I go get a Harvard degree it will cost me a lot of money but I will in all likelihood have gotten an actual education along the way. You can argue that it isn't a good deal financially but you do get something at the end of the day. If you can't turn a Harvard degree into some sort of job you're doing it wrong. Comparing Harvard to or even a state university to ITT Tech is ridiculous.
Companies like ITT (I don't really think of them as schools) basically provide a near worthless degree which nobody respects and doesn't open doors. They do so knowing that a large percentage of their customers (students) will fail out. They exist to load credulous low income people with debt while failing to provide them a real education. They prey on people who probably really aren't the sort of people who are college material in the first place. College is great but it isn't the right path for everyone. Trade schools would serve many of them much better and there is a clear need for skilled trades.
What part of "ITT Technical Institute" makes you think that you're not going into a program that's functionally at the trade school level? In San Diego, it and Coleman College were both seen by anyone I've known as a way to learn functional skills in a given area. It's not a 4 year collegiate undergrad experience, and I can't see why anyone would think so.
People are ragging on "for-profit colleges" as some hideous evil, but whatever your experiences with Brightpoint, Ashford, or some other trendy places, IT
ITT Tech is not a trade school (Score:2)
What part of "ITT Technical Institute" makes you think that you're not going into a program that's functionally at the trade school level?
Perhaps because they don't advertise themselves as being a trade school? Or because they aren't one. ITT Tech advertises having 6 schools. Please point out which one is the trade school:
School of Electronics Technology
School of Drafting and Design
School of Information Technology
School of Business
School of Criminal Justice
Breckinridge
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We need quality trade schools, like ITT use to be. I'm in the mid-west, there are so many manufacturing facilities that cannot find enough trained machinists to keep up with production.
Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:5, Interesting)
that cannot find enough trained machinists to keep up with production
That's because the entry level job is now open for Journeyman with 5+ years of experience, working $8/hr. Maybe if they did what they used to and hire dozens out of highschool for minimum wage, laid off the stoners and kept the ones who learned they'd have trained machinists again like companies did for centuries, but there's no instant gratification in that plan.
Instead they just hope someone else trains their employees for them, and whine like entitled brats when it turns out nobody's interested in doing that.
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They were pretty honest to me. Get a CSC degree and have your choice of jobs.
Maybe you just didn't actually read what the job prospects for your major are/were?
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You should look more closely at the data [wikipedia.org]. That 4-year degree (from a real institution, not ITT or Devry) is worth much more than $180,000 in increased wages and increased prospects over the course of a career.
Unemployment in particular drops more than 25% for those with a 4-year degree.
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Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:5, Insightful)
They need to be stopped.
Nope, but requiring a degree or considering it on a job application needs to be stopped, I've worked in places where we won't even hire people who don't come from a short list of 8 colleges. There's a reason things like the bar association and the medical board exist: anyone's daddy can buy a degree, but not everyone can pass tests of competence.
The only barrier to employment should be certifications of competence in a field, either ad hoc (interview) or standardized (ex. the bar). You can go to all the Ivy League schools you want and get a large alphabet of degrees, but if you can't get certified you can't get employed. Unfortunately because of the need to justify H-1B's and outsourcing, employers are reluctant to embrace this model. If you could show that a large body of qualified applications do exist and are unemployed, it casts a big shadow on your statements that there aren't enough bodies to fill reqs. Even in careers like IT where there are some certifications, it seems to be a moving target of expensive and narrowly defined skills that you have to continuously chase. It's possible that industry professionals and the government are going to need to team up and create laws.
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Degrees are extremely over-rated, and we have too much emphasis on them in our society-- but they give you some kind of baseline. I will likely never hire a devry, ITT, or University of Phoenix graduate (and so help me, I hope I never again have the misfortune of hiring a Harvard or MIT grad).
It used to be that a degree meant that you had a balanced education, and you had proved that you can learn new things. Now, it seems like universities are becoming more like trade schools (at least my alma mattar's eng
too dificult to hire people for ( 1year) internsh (Score:5, Insightful)
So you want free labor?
Re:too dificult to hire people for ( 1year) intern (Score:4, Insightful)
No, but the pay cap is about $8-10/hour and it can't fund healthcare benefits. Paying $15/hour when investing so much in a person (18-20 year old child) just doesn't work. Honestly, I would prefer to pay $5/hour plus pay for some formal courses for them to take (of our choosing).
There is a way to do it, but it takes a lot of paperwork and you need to prove they aren't doing billable work or something. It ends up being more community service than anything-- which I don't really object to, but there isn't much in the way of a business benefit.
that is why an apprenticeship system is needed and (Score:3)
that is why an apprenticeship system is needed and gov can take that grant / loan funds to fund it. But not the big corps want the locked to job H1B's that they can unpay and work 60-80 hours.
Say you pay $5/hr and grant covers other costs / the student has to cover their class room costs and you can kick in if you want to.
Germany has a good apprenticeship system (Score:5, Insightful)
Germany has a good apprenticeship system that mixes real paid work with a trade school like classroom. That is what is needed in the USA and not years of pure class room at an high cost.
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anyone's daddy can buy a degree, but not everyone can pass tests of competence.
We used to give people IQ tests, but they outlawed those for hiring in the 70s because they were "racist." So we replaced the simple test that would tell you whether a person was trainable with a degree requirement. But the degree mills have no incentive not to pass people who give them money. So now we have lots of people spending lots of money on questionable education and worthless degrees no one trusts anyway.
Society's wounds are self-inflicted.
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Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:4, Insightful)
so the schools keep increasing because they know they are getting paid no matter what happens to the kid
Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:5, Interesting)
Worse, as more and more people are selected for seats in real schools, the remaining people with piles of federal cash burning holes in their pockets are, on average, worse and worse students. So building a good quality school with high standards isn't even necessarily the right thing to do even if your heart is in the right place and you're willing invest the money doing so. Ultimately, you just end up with a bunch of fly by night operations that specialize in separating vulnerable students from their loan money.
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Re:Universities aren't completely honest either (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't Worry... (Score:5, Funny)
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They will *HAVE* to do something differently in order to survive.
Programming boot camps. Big money now that the federal government is getting involved.
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I would be surprised if they cannot do exactly the same thing. The problem ITT Educational Services, Inc. currently faces is the sanctions imposed on them. A new company won't be under the same sanctions. It takes time to build up enough history to be sanctioned by DOE. Playing whack-a-mole with unethical corporate entities is a long-held tradition in the US. This is because we consistently fail to hold corporate officers accountable for their actions.
I would love to be wrong about this.
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I think they included GI Bill money (which is part student, part federal gov't money) and federally-guaranteed student loans.
Well Good. (Score:2)
Now people can take a look at their local community college options without being distracted by ITT ads.
If the feds could arrange to move the the $580 billion to the community colleges to fund more technical programs, they might find they get value for money.
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The moral of the story is: Let your curriculum and graduates speak for the school's quality, not a TV commercial.
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Right, that's what kept people from applying to their local community college...
Don't confuse federal loan guarantees with actual money - that $580 Million (not Billion) is owed by the students to the lenders, not as grants from the federal government.
Re:Well Good. (Score:4, Interesting)
Right, that's what kept people from applying to their local community college...
Don't confuse federal loan guarantees with actual money - that $580 Million (not Billion) is owed by the students to the lenders, not as grants from the federal government. In order for the local community colleges to get the $580 Million that previously went to ITT Tech the local community colleges would have to raise tuition to the level charged by ITT Tech.
In the case of my local college, it was oversubscribed and the technical programs were limited and oriented to licensed trades.
However for first year college, they cover the same stuff as any other college for a fraction of the price and the results counted towards a degree in the state universities. So you if you played it right, you could get a serious discount on your education. This worked for 2 of 4 children, the other 2 went straight to uni. It also serves as a path to escape high school early. College is such a better learning environment than high school.
Hence - if the US government wants cost effective college teaching, fund the community colleges to do it. They have a track record and a customer base. The local colleges would not need to raise tuition at all. They are able to teach at a specific cost per student. There's no need for it to change because they take on a few more techy courses.
Point taken on it being loans though.
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Hence - if the US government wants cost effective college teaching, fund the community colleges to do it. They have a track record and a customer base. The local colleges would not need to raise tuition at all. They are able to teach at a specific cost per student. There's no need for it to change because they take on a few more techy courses.
As a reminder that sometimes community colleges aren't necessarily the panacea you only need to look at City College of San Francisco...
Apparently the financial governance at CCSF is so bad, they have been threatened with losing their accreditation. They are currently now on probation. Elected officials (since it is a public community college, board members are elected by the citizens of SF) were convicted of diverting/laundering bond money to finance election campaigns, and accreditation audits showed 1
Just get out of education (Score:2, Insightful)
How much money goes to the favored public and private institutions from the federal government? There are plenty of worthless degrees you can get at any institution. None of their promises of employment or employment at a particular wage are worth anything.
Why is it all right to go after the technical schools and not go after everybody else?
They should just stop the funding and let all the colleges adapt. The more they've subsidized students costs of attending, the higher the tuition has been priced. Ju
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Take away a GI's right to go to school after service. That's a great political move.. The reason ITT and co. were specifically targeted was because they were playing games with their employment numbers. That assumes that the enrollee's even completed their programs, which should be a condition for that individual's education.
Basically it comes down to people making bad decisions with their education choices and having someone else (the gov) paying for their mistakes. If you're giving someone free money, mak
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If you want to reduce the cost of attending a public universit
"Taxpayer dollars" (Score:2)
Heh - as if what we paid came close to what the Feds spent. If you're going to use snide-ness, why not try "a.k.a. yet more debt"?
On the other hand, where do you think all those "job training" dollars that a lot of people keep demanding go? The Feds feel pressured to spend them on...well...something...regardless of actual results.
Good for the goose... (Score:2)
It would be great if the Department of Education would impose the same scrutiny on the so-called non-profit state and private colleges...
Good (Score:5, Interesting)
I had a friend that worked at the office of one of these campuses. She told me that 99% of the time they didn't even have a teacher for the class until the day before it started, let alone lesson plans or anything else. She quit after the second FBI raid and never looked back.
Let me fix that for you... (Score:2)
"permanently after approximately 50 years of continuous service. "
Should be:
"permanently after approximately 50 years of ripping off the American taxpayer and tricking it's so called students"
Went to ITT (Score:5, Insightful)
Having gone to ITT Tech AND then having gone to get my BSEE from an accredited university I can say without doubt those schools are designed to let you pass with a minimum amount of effort. HOWEVER, you CAN get a tremendous amount of knowledge IF you step up to do the extra work, which is what I did. That being said if you are willing to step up and be that self motivated to do that much work then it's no harder to go to a normal uni and getting a real degree.. which I did 2 years after going to ITT tech.. it was an expensive waste of time and energy that would have been better put to something else.... like a real degree. I did find the first few years of EE classes pretty easy due to what I had previously learned... but the path I took mistakenly took is not one I would recommend for others.. It REALLY wasn't worth it in time or money.
good riddance.
Re:Went to ITT (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess it's gotten a lot worse from 20+ years ago. My ITT two year degree from 23 years ago is accredited, and employers at the time were very happy with graduates from the particular ITT I attended. At the time, they had a 100% placement rate for everyone who graduated and did not go on to further education (and that was my whole reason for going, as my 4 year engineering degree from a top 10 school got me and 70% of the graduating class na-da : and the rest broke down as 20% going on to grad school and 10% being the chem engineers getting hired to go work in Saudi Arabia). But that quality came from the local ITT staff, not the corporate level. I heard even back then that the quality of your education depended on which location you went to. And it was definitely a heck of a lot easier than my 4 year degree, but also one heck of a lot more practical (which makes sense given it was a degree for a technician working on circuit boards, etc, not an engineer designing parts or systems).
so sad :( (Score:4, Funny)
I was a student there. That was the best 7 years of my life -- good friends, better drugs, best sex. I'd drink a red bull and viagra on Friday afternoon and fuck 10-15 dudes before Monday came around. I'm working as a fullstack junior web engineer at a SF startup so there's just as much, if not more, sex, but I miss the drugs and friends. Skipping work because I'm hungover isn't quite the same as skipping class because I'm hungover.
I plan on doing my own startup in a couple months, once I get a cofounder, raise a series A and find an idea. I wouldn't be here without ITT so this is a little sad for me :(
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You're comment was just sad and ridiculous enough to have the hint of reality. I enjoyed that, so thanks for warming my morning.
Oh Noes! (Score:2)
Where else can I go and do very little and get a degree that no-one takes seriously if they close down ITT Tech.
Thank goodness I still have the University of Phoenix to go to.
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If you don't want a degree, you can just take any courses you want at the CC.
While I was in HS I took the whole drafting sequence at the local CC, along with a couple of programming languages. Saved my 2 courses in Engineering school, but that wasn't the point.
$580 Million in "taxpayer money" (Score:2)
In the form of federal grants? GI Bill Tuition payments? Or, the most likely form, as federally guaranteed student loans - which aren't really "taxpayer dollars" until the student fails to pay their loan payments.
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ITT was one of the groups that specifically targeted GI's. At one point I remember reading that 80% of their revenue came from the DOD. The Fed's have moved aggressively against these colleges targeting vet's. ITT was disbarred from taking GI bill money a week or so ago and this is the result.
devry & ITT used to be good but collage for al (Score:2)
devry & ITT used to be good. But collage for all push made it so you needed an degree so they kind of got roped into the degree system. Now for real good accreditation you needed the full load of filler and fluff with I think masters or higher / phd level professors.
Now unlike the trade schools the professor at the collages they for the most part have little to no real world work experience (out side of the ivy tower)
https://www.dslreports.com/for... [dslreports.com]
I used to know an Programer who went to an state schoo
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my god man. what skool did you's go to for lerning to spelling?
I want to make damn sure my kids do not land in the same place!
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> devry & ITT used to be good
I can see exactly why you'd think that just from the quality of your own writing.
Finally! (Score:3)
I know ITT Tech and other for-profit schools fill a gap in the education system, but this whole sector seems perfectly positioned to scam uneducated people out of student loan money, VA benefits, trade adjustment benefits, etc. and give them very little in return.
The vast majority of potential students would be much better served going to community college, or if they're in a strong union state, joining a trade's apprenticeship program and actually getting paid while learning.
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For as long as I can remember, every politician in every election has espoused the position that they support education - damn liars every single one of them, Republican or Democrat.
I can remember at least 4 decades of broken promises on supporting education, as community and state colleges around the nation cut costs and negatively effected the student
Between Trump U and this story (Score:3, Insightful)
For-profit? (Score:2, Interesting)
So what about all of the universities that operate with the same motives? I happen to know that the drive to get more Adjunct
Faculty is money/profit driven. As are all of the fees ( Parking, meals, activity, recreational, computer, lab, etc... ).
They scream for tuition and fee hikes while having billions of endowments and holdings...
Graduate students are used as cheap intellectual laborers...
Most Universities ask a job applicant (technical only, in my experience ) "How much money can you bring in?"
Research
My former "school" went down too (Score:3)
As a testament to their teaching, in the Linux class, I had to show the instructor how to compile source code and so on. By the time I was thinking about calling quits, it was obvious that I was now effectively teaching the more general A+, Network, 50+ student class. The day before an open note test, the lady mentioned above asked to xerox my notes. When I came in the next day, every last student had a copy of my notes. Why? Because they had zero confidence. I walked right out.
So now I am just reminiscing but you get the idea.
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Were you ever able to leverage this learning experience to get a job?
Received $$$ via government loans (Score:2, Interesting)
"ITT Tech received an estimated $580 million in federal money (aka taxpayer dollars),"
The wording in the article and summary make it sound like government just wrote them a check. Wrong. The school received the money because its students, like 70+% of the rest of the students in the country, are taking government loans and grants to pay for their schooling.
Too bad the story wasn't about the Department of Education closing its doors forever.
There goes that job track (Score:4, Funny)
Good. (Score:3)
Good riddance.
This will end one of the major sources of hacky/bad programmers.
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This is the way it used to be. You learned a trade and went to work.
Not everyone is cut out for University and have no reason to go - other than accumulating large amounts of debt
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The new version is you pay to get a degree. Learning the trade is extracurricular.
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ITT was a bunch of trade schools. Not good ones.
Like anything else, there are shades of grey. Good schools teach you how to learn independently for life _and_ teach you valuable skills. Bad schools indoctrinate. Many of the schools that claim 'life training' are, in fact, the worst indoctrinators (*studies programs in general).
Trade schools are better than indoctrination centers. At least you don't come out stupider than you start.
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Dumb (Score:2, Insightful)
"We live in a society that does not value education at all,"
1) We have a society that effectively mandates education for a minimum of 12 years
2) We spend more per pupil than any country in the world to educate people
3) The subsidies to universities number in the hundreds billions of dollars
4) We encourage everyone to go to college. Everyone.
If you're whining that you don't get college for free, keep in mind that if you lived in a society that pays for "free" college, the admission standards for college w
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I haven't heard anything about Devry in a long time but I had a friend that went there in the early 80s, he worked on the internals of teddy ruxpin while he was still in school.
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I'm friends with a guy who (weirdly) got a full scholarship to DeVry, graduated with a bachelors in three years, and pretty quickly got a good job at Siemens. At the time, the rest of my circle of friends (most of whom went to the state engineering research university) laughed at him for picking a shitty school, but in retrospect he was the smartest of us all...
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I haven't heard anything about Devry in a long time but I had a friend that went there in the early 80s, he worked on the internals of teddy ruxpin while he was still in school.
Devry is also facing a lawsuit for deceptive advertising for saying they have an 90% placement rate. Also with declining enrollments (due to people being more skeptical about for-profit schools like Corinthian), last year DeVry closed 14 campuses and moved the students on-line. The writing is probably on the wall for them as well...
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Out in the real world, once you have just a little bit of experience the name of the institution on the degree no longer matters (to most).
I wouldn't want to work for a company that would even considering a retro-active review of a person's credentials that were not forged. They are hired, all that ma
Re:State colleges give garbage degrees (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sorry but state colleges give garbage degrees. My brother just graduated from the University of Maine degree with a liberal arts degree and is sweeping floors at a gas station.
No, your brother chose a garbage major, and chose to spend a lot of money on an education that doesn't align with a career doing anything but sweeping floors at that gas station. It's not the state college's responsibility to make your brother face reality and study something that's actually challenging. If he wants to take on debt so he can spend four years on poetry or Russian literature or on women's studies, that's his business, and HIS debt. Quit whining - yourself, and on his behalf. You're as bad as he is, if you're blaming anyone other than him for his absurd choices.
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Most schools offer shit degrees, and shit people take shit degrees. Then they end up with a shit load of debt and a shitty life. It's the cycle of shit.The problem is that we loan them our money, so they can be stupid shits and continue the cycle of shit. This shit needs to stop.
What we need is shithawks to cull these shitrats, before the shithurricane buries us all in a shitslide. You hear that, Bobandy? A SHITSLIDE.
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Uh... "liberal arts degree" it's not the college, it's the degree field....
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I went to the University of Maine and starting almost immediately afterward I've been working with Harvard-trained people, on AAA PC video games in Boston, and now as a full-time college math lecturer in New York. I always felt that you got out what you put into it.
There's a legitimate debate to be had whether a student like your brother would be better off if they'd been flunked out or not accepted by the university in question. Most of the cultural pressure, however, is to pass those students on.
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DeVry and ITT both have ripped off so many of my classmates. People, mostly from working class families, tried to get a technical degree they could use right away. But instead they got a mountain of debt and a degree that was often not of any value once the person got even a year of industry experience. Getting that first job with just a DeVry degree is a matter of luck, luck that employers didn't simply throw out your resume.
Re:Loans (Score:5, Interesting)
What we really need in this country are 4-year community colleges that are really focused on delivering value.
What we really need are good 2-year vocational schools + apprenticeships that teach young people actually useful skills, like plumbing, mechanic, welding, electrician, etc.
My company recently advertised a marketing position, and we got over 300 applications.
I recently tried to find a plumber for a kitchen remodel, and it took me over 3 weeks to find someone who wasn't fully booked for the next month, and he was only able to squeeze my job in by working on Sundays while my daughter watched his kids. I paid him $80/hr, and he paid my daughter $5/hr for babysitting, so he netted $75.
Re:Loans (Score:4, Funny)
My nephew just turned 27, and makes 100K+ with overtime as a high voltage electrician.
I have a degree, and 20 years on him, and I make just a bit more than him.
However, my office is not 100+ ft in the air, with 45 mph crosswinds and humming 100K voltage lines of death over head.
My hats off to him, I will stick with the computer and office chair.
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The private universities are amateurs. Look at the public ones. Palatial campuses, massively inflated salaries, infinite job security, price gouging, on and on
Re:finally (Score:4, Insightful)