He's talking about poor third-world countries. Nothing like this could possibly be going on in the US, could it? In the US the government takes care of everyone, so we don't need entrepreneurs.

Quote:Schools that Serve
Marvin Olasky
Ten years ago James Tooley, a professor of education with a doctorate and a World Bank grant to study private schools in a dozen developing countries, took the standard path toward helping the poor: He flew first class and stayed at 5-star hotels.
But something happened in India as he visited private schools and colleges that cater to the privileged. At night, lying on 500-thread-count Egyptian-cotton sheets, he meditated about the "con" that he was now part of: Wealthy Indians enjoy foreign aid because they live in a poor country, the poor fall further behind, and the researchers live richly.
Then Tooley broke the rules. With guilt feelings and some spare time, he actually went into the slums instead of riding past them with his driver. He was surprised to see little handwritten signs announcing the existence of private schools: He thought private schools are for the rich. Guided through alleys and up narrow, dark, dirty staircases, he entered classrooms and found dedicated teachers and students.
Tooley found schools that survive not with government money or international bequests, but through $2-per-month fees paid by rickshaw pullers who scrimp and save to give their children a chance not to pull rickshaws. He went on to visit 50 Indian private schools in poor areas over the next 10 days. Did some foundation make them possible? No, these were for-profit schools created by poor but persevering entrepreneurs.
Tooley was astounded to see high motivation and better results than at the better-funded government schools. He then visited other private schools for the poor in cities and villages throughout India, Africa (Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya), and even China. In The Beautiful Tree (Cato, 2009), he describes how he regularly found government schools with better-paid but poorly motivated teachers, and private schools somehow surviving on very little income.
Why did Tooley slog through the mud when he could have hung out in hotel bars with other international researchers? I emailed him and asked. Tooley responded: "I was brought up as an evangelical Christian, baptized at 14, but lost my faith by 16. For the next thirty years I was a searcher. Age 46, I said a prayer again recommitting myself to Jesus. Ups and downs in the faith since then." No surprise: When someone goes beyond the call of duty, it's often because Someone else is calling him—and the path isn't always straight.
Throughout most of The Beautiful Tree Tooley shows rather than tells, but in the interest of space here I'll need to quote his summary: In poor countries "private education forms the majority of provision. In these areas parents have genuine choices of a number of competing private schools within easy reach and are sensitive to the price mechanism (schools close if demand is low, and new schools open to cater to expanded demand)."
Tooley's crucial conclusions: "In these genuine markets, educational entrepreneurs respond to parental needs and requirements. . . . Their quality is higher than that of government schools provided for the poor." And his findings are not merely anecdotal. Governmental officials showed little interest in his findings, but a Templeton Foundation grant allowed him to create research teams that tested 24,000 fourth-graders from a variety of schools in India, China, Nigeria, and Ghana. The result: Children in private schools scored 75 percent better than comparable students in government schools. You'd think this would excite other World Bank researchers—but like Darrow Miller, Hernando de Soto, and William Easterly (see "Don't be a Bepper," WORLD, Jan. 13, 2007), Tooley looks for bottom-up rather than top-down strategies, and that could put a lot of Big Economic Planners out of work.
The title of Tooley's book comes from his sense that parents don't need government officials to tell them what to do: A beautiful tree can grow without supervision from "development experts" who believe that poor children will be educated only if governments, with funding from rich nations, establish free, universal public schooling.
The better way: Poor parents pay teachers directly. Voucher plans "if done in the right way" can help, but that's a vital caveat, because it's easy to end up with good ideas killed via fraud and unintended market distortions. The essential strategy is this: If students don't learn, teachers don't eat.
Lies too big even for government operatives?
Quote:GAO revises its report critical of practices at for-profit schools
By Nick Anderson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 7, 2010; 8:44 PM
The Government Accountability Office has revised portions of a report it released last summer on recruiting practices in for-profit higher education, softening several examples from an undercover investigation but standing by its central finding that colleges had encouraged fraud and misled potential applicants.
The revisions have come as the Obama administration and senior Democratic lawmakers are pushing for tougher regulation of the industry. A Republican senator said the revisions called into question some of the conclusions in the report.
The original report, issued Aug. 4 in testimony to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, examined recruiting practices at 15 for-profit colleges, including campuses operated by the Apollo Group, Corinthian Colleges and The Washington Post Co.'s Kaplan unit.
Undercover GAO investigators posed as prospective students in encounters with college representatives that were captured in audio and video recordings. The GAO is a nonpartisan [say what?!?] investigative arm of Congress.
Its widely reported findings were a major political setback for the industry, and executives apologized for incidents that put their schools in an embarrassing light. Industry critics said the report buttressed their case as they pushed for a new rule requiring that for-profit colleges demonstrate that their courses lead to "gainful employment" for their students or lose access to lucrative federal student aid programs.
The share prices for several for-profit education companies fell sharply after the report's release, and the industry has since mounted an aggressive lobbying and advertising campaign portraying administration efforts to impose new regulations as a threat to educational access for students underserved by traditional colleges.
Key passages altered
The revised report, posted Nov. 30 on the GAO Web site, changed some key passages. In one anecdote cited as an example of deceptive marketing, the GAO originally reported: "Undercover applicant was told that he could earn up to $100 an hour as a massage therapist. While this may be possible, according to the [Bureau of Labor Statistics] 90 percent of all massage therapists in California make less than $34 per hour."
The revised version states: "While one school representative indicated to the undercover applicant that he could earn up to $30 an hour as a massage therapist, another representative told the applicant that the school's massage instructors and directors can earn $150-$200 an hour. While this may be possible, according to the BLS, 90 percent of all massage therapists in California make less than $34 per hour."
In another example, the report originally stated that a college representative "told the undercover applicant that by the time the college would be required by [the] Education [Department] to verify any information about the applicant, the applicant would have already graduated from the 7-month program."
The revised version states that "the undercover applicant suggested" that possibility and the "representative acknowledged this was true."
There were several other significant edits to the examples detailed in the report.
GAO spokesman Chuck Young wrote in an e-mail that the office issues revisions when "additional information comes to light and provides additional context to our already published work." Of the roughly 1,000 reports issued in the last fiscal year, about 12 received later revisions, he said. He added that the office reviewed more than 80 hours of audio from the investigation before it released the revision on the for-profit college report.
"Nothing changed with the overall message of the report, and nothing changed with any of our findings," Young wrote.
'Troubling questions'
Sen. Mike Enzi (Wyo.), the committee's ranking Republican, wrote in a letter Tuesday to the acting comptroller, Gene L. Dodaro, who heads the GAO, that the revisions raise "a number of troubling questions."
Enzi wrote that the revisions appear "substantial" and "undermine many of the allegations" in the GAO report. He asked Dodaro to withdraw the testimony and explain in detail why the changes were made.
Justine Sessions, a spokeswoman for Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), the committee chairman, said the revisions "do not change the substance of the report" or its conclusions that the for-profit colleges investigated "used deceptive or fraudulent recruiting techniques to enroll new students."
Lanny Davis, a spokesman for the Coalition for Educational Success, which represents some for-profit colleges, said the revisions in the report appeared on the whole to portray the industry less harshly. None of the revisions, he said, made the industry look worse.
"The entire credibility of this report is called into question," Davis said.
Education Department spokesman Justin Hamilton said the department would have no comment on the revisions.
(12-09-2010, 03:13 AM)Yancy Derringer Wrote: [ -> ]Lies too big even for government operatives?
Quote:GAO revises its report critical of practices at for-profit schools
By Nick Anderson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 7, 2010; 8:44 PM
The Government Accountability Office has revised portions of a report it released last summer on recruiting practices in for-profit higher education, softening several examples from an undercover investigation but standing by its central finding that colleges had encouraged fraud and misled potential applicants.
The revisions have come as the Obama administration and senior Democratic lawmakers are pushing for tougher regulation of the industry. A Republican senator said the revisions called into question some of the conclusions in the report.
Key passages altered
The revised report, posted Nov. 30 on the GAO Web site, changed some key passages. In one anecdote cited as an example of deceptive marketing, the GAO originally reported: "Undercover applicant was told that he could earn up to $100 an hour as a massage therapist. While this may be possible, according to the [Bureau of Labor Statistics] 90 percent of all massage therapists in California make less than $34 per hour."
The revised version states: "While one school representative indicated to the undercover applicant that he could earn up to $30 an hour as a massage therapist, another representative told the applicant that the school's massage instructors and directors can earn $150-$200 an hour. While this may be possible, according to the BLS, 90 percent of all massage therapists in California make less than $34 per hour."
In another example, the report originally stated that a college representative "told the undercover applicant that by the time the college would be required by [the] Education [Department] to verify any information about the applicant, the applicant would have already graduated from the 7-month program."
The revised version states that "the undercover applicant suggested" that possibility and the "representative acknowledged this was true."
There were several other significant edits to the examples detailed in the report.
GAO spokesman Chuck Young wrote in an e-mail that the office issues revisions when "additional information comes to light and provides additional context to our already published work." Of the roughly 1,000 reports issued in the last fiscal year, about 12 received later revisions, he said. He added that the office reviewed more than 80 hours of audio from the investigation before it released the revision on the for-profit college report.
"Nothing changed with the overall message of the report, and nothing changed with any of our findings," Young wrote.
'Troubling questions'
Sen. Mike Enzi (Wyo.), the committee's ranking Republican, wrote in a letter Tuesday to the acting comptroller, Gene L. Dodaro, who heads the GAO, that the revisions raise "a number of troubling questions."
Enzi wrote that the revisions appear "substantial" and "undermine many of the allegations" in the GAO report. He asked Dodaro to withdraw the testimony and explain in detail why the changes were made.
Justine Sessions, a spokeswoman for Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), the committee chairman, said the revisions "do not change the substance of the report" or its conclusions that the for-profit colleges investigated "used deceptive or fraudulent recruiting techniques to enroll new students."
Lanny Davis, a spokesman for the Coalition for Educational Success, which represents some for-profit colleges, said the revisions in the report appeared on the whole to portray the industry less harshly. None of the revisions, he said, made the industry look worse.
"The entire credibility of this report is called into question," Davis said.
Education Department spokesman Justin Hamilton said the department would have no comment on the revisions.
PFFT! The for-profits go to Nuremberg

or what?
Quote:'Non-profit' Colleges Can Be Quite Profitable
Saturday, 27 Aug 2011 09:56 PM
So-called "non-profit" colleges actually rake in profits by spending less on students than they reap in revenue, according to a new report.
"If we define profit as 'charging consumers more for a service than it costs to provide that service,' then both government and officially non-profit institutions" are profitable, the report from the John Williams Pope Center for Higher Education Policy discloses.
The report cites a book by Oklahoma State professor Vance Fried, "Better/Cheaper College." He calculates that a quality liberal arts education at a residential college needs to cost only around $8,000 per year, but most colleges charge far more.
"Based on tuition revenues alone, the average private undergraduate school makes about $5,500 per student per year," Fried writes in a recent paper.
"When donations and endowment income are added, profits jump to $12,800 per student," which is twice the profit margin earned by for-profit University of Phoenix, he points out.
Schools like Harvard, a private university, and the University of North Carolina, a public institution, "do not show profits on their books, but instead take their profits in the form of spending on some combination of research, graduate education, low-demand majors, low faculty teaching loads, excess compensation, and featherbedding," Fried writes.
Public universities are also profitable because they receive large amounts of support from the state. Fried calculates that profit at these schools is around $11,000 per student. The "profits are spent on items like low teaching loads and excessive compensation," he adds.
Fried regards faculty research as an unnecessary expense. And he suggests that professors should have a teaching load of 12 hours per semester even if they are engaged in research.
He also argues that a reduction in government support for higher education would lead to higher college productivity — and lower government spending.
So, for example, some fat, bald, underachieving prof stuck at a backwater government university, one with a low teaching load (such as one course per semester), and excessive compensation (such as >$100,000 per year) would be the epitome of the huge hypocritical ripoff that is the "non-profit"

higher ed cartel.
Can anyone think of someone who fits that profile? Someone who spends his spare time stalking small Christian schools and start ups so he can try to drive them out of business? Because he wants integrity and quality in higher ed? NO! Because he wants to eliminate competition and keep ripping off students and taxpayers by collecting his fat perks while providing little or no productivity!!
Quote:So, for example, some fat, bald, underachieving prof stuck at a backwater government university, one with a low teaching load (such as one course per semester), and excessive compensation (such as >$100,000 per year) would be the epitome of the huge hypocritical ripoff that is the "non-profit" Rolleyes higher ed cartel.
If MY FRIEND craps his pants spreading a pungent odor, come on! Cut the guy some slack, will ya? He's sick g-d dammit! What are you, a Nazi or a pedophile that you can't feel his embarrassment?
If YOUR FRIEND craps his pants spreading a pungent odor, he's the vilest sight I beheld in ages! Sick? You bet that IS sick! Didn't the foul bastard know about toilets? I bet he's drunk again...
(08-29-2011, 05:57 AM)Winston Smith Wrote: [ -> ]So, for example, some fat, bald, underachieving prof stuck at a backwater government university, one with a low teaching load (such as one course per semester), and excessive compensation (such as >$100,000 per year) would be the epitome of the huge hypocritical ripoff that is the "non-profit"
higher ed cartel.
Gollin is certainly the poster boy for that.
(08-30-2011, 05:33 AM)ham Wrote: [ -> ]If YOUR FRIEND craps his pants spreading a pungent odor, he's the vilest sight I beheld in ages! Sick? You bet that IS sick! Didn't the foul bastard know about toilets? I bet he's drunk again...
Now that you mention it, Gollin could be the poster boy for that too!
(08-30-2011, 09:46 AM)Martin Eisenstadt Wrote: [ -> ]Now that you mention it, Gollin could be the poster boy for that too!
Gollin could sell a lot of posters.
Profscam: Professors and the Demise of Higher Education
Quote:Profscam reveals the direct and ultimate reason for the collapse of higher education in the United States - the selfish, wayward, and corrupt American university professor. In this fiercely argued, often infuriating book, investigative journalist Charles J. Sykes charges that college teaching has become a lucrative racket, where the most important responsibility - undergraduate teaching - has been abandoned in favor of trendy research, the pursuit of personal or political agendas, outside consulting contracts, and the drive for tenure.