Scam Schools And Diploma Mills

Online education has exploded in popularity over the past fifteen years. Unfortunately, scam schools and diploma mills have also boosted their numbers during this same time period. The intended purpose of this article is to discuss the warning signs associated with fraudulent schools. Nursing Students General Students Article

Several generations ago, a high school education had been sufficient enough to land a good position. An individual could graduate from high school, find an entry-level job, remain with the same place of employment for thirty to forty years, enjoy some middle class comforts along the way, and retire with a generous employer-sponsored pension. Well, those days are a thing of the distant past.

With a high-school education no longer a ticket to a well-paying job, and 77 percent of adults over 25 without a bachelor's degree, trade schools have enormous appeal to anyone looking to make more money (Yeoman, 1997). To make things worse, several of these schools are nothing more than boldfaced scams and diploma mills. Some scam schools are designed solely to amass tuition monies, federal grants, and student loans (Yeoman, 1997).

Diploma mills are schools that are more interested in taking your money than providing you with a quality education (U.S. Department of Education, 2009). The typical diploma mill or scam school has no selective admissions requirements and minimal or no academic work required. In return, the so-called 'graduate' receives a diploma or degree upon completion of the program that is basically worthless.

Multiple warning signs are associated with scam schools and diploma mills. Some people do not spot these red flags until it is too late. Therefore, be on the lookout for the following attributes:

  • Diplomas or degrees are granted based solely on life experience.
  • So-called 'professors' and 'instructors' are difficult to reach
  • Diplomas or degrees are granted after a very short time frame.
  • Instead of paying per college credit, students pay for each degree.
  • The school has a lack of contact information.
  • Tests are administered online and are not proctored or monitored.
  • The school's website is riddled with grammatical and spelling errors.
  • The school is accredited by a phony accrediting agency.
  • The school's website does not end in .edu

Some of you might be reading this and simultaneously thinking, "All of this stuff should be common sense. Doesn't everybody know to keep an eye out for these red flags by now?"

Unfortunately, many people are conned by scam schools and diploma mills every year. High school dropouts pay money to odious institutions in exchange for diplomas that are later discovered to be worth far less than the paper on which they are printed. People who are too busy to deal with the rigors of higher education pay hard-earned dollars for college degrees that end up having no value in the academic world or the workplace. Click on the link below to read some of these peoples' stories:

Online Degrees: Schools Scam Aspiring Students

Always keep in mind that if it seems too good to be true, it probably is. Any schooling that is quick and easy is probably associated with a diploma mill or scam school. In a nutshell, keep your guard up and make sure that the people in your lives do not fall for any educational scams.

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Specializes in OB/women's Health, Pharm.

I have never met anyone in academia or in Nursing leadership who holds a U of P degree in esteem. Perhaps someone with a solid track record and years of experience will not be hurt by a degree from there, but it seems to be a waste of money for many others, because it provides no real advantage.

For PhDs they are famous for dragging out the process to get more and more $$. I know someone who has been working away at it for over 5 years and still is not sure he will get the Ok to do the research work he needs to complete this degree. After a masters and doctoral work there, this person is well past $100K in debt and is rounding the corner toward $150K. Interestingly, I have yet to see this person use these advanced degrees to develop new content or approaches to his job. Seems like a lot of $$ and work to purchase a degree from an institution that gets little respect from many. He could have finished a doctoral degree from a well established local school by now; at least two local nationally respected programs are now fully or partially online as well.

I think some people are lured to these programs false promises that it won't take very long, by the online aspects, no stats requirement, and because they may not need a stellar undergrad GPA or high GRE scores to get in. Sad. Why not apply and take a few courses while waiting for admission, concentrate on doing really well in them, to show you can do the work. Then use that to compensate for the lower GRE scores or GPA.

I don't wish this person's experience on anyone.

I was recently asked to help a graduate nursing student in an online program with a paper on a topic in my specialty, this class being on that specialty and she found me via my website. When I asked, she told me that the professor is not a (specialty) and doesn't know anything about it. I was pretty po'd that somebody could be in nursing graduate school taking a course in (specialty) taught by someone who isn't one and doesn't know squat about it.

I ended up contacting the "professor" who freely admitted not knowing anything about it. She gave her students an online reference (one that was completely inappropriate for nursing) and expected them to complete their major class assignment with it as a template. Then she sent me a paper to critique, and it was completely pathetic, had nothing whatsoever to do with (specialty). She offered to pay me for the time I spend doing it, but I never saw a dime from her. Not that I expected it... but I did spend some good time pointing out the major flaws in the whole thing. Oh, it was bad...and again, for graduate school credit in my field, taught by someone who knows nothing about it, not the education, not the process, not the certifications, not anything.

I have two colleagues, one with a 6-month "credit for life experience" "PhD" from one school that was closed for fraud (but she still claims the degree on her website and on her sig line in emails), and another who is out about fifty grand halfway into a PhD program but whose papers are nonsense on the face of them. She knows it but says her faculty loves them. I have no respect whatsoever for a program like that...and I'm afraid that a degree from this sort of thing is going to queer the deal for those of us who earned real ones, doing real research, working with real professionals, increasing the pool of knowledge in our profession, not just doing online "courses" with little discourse.

I'm starting to hear stirrings about looking at this whole online degree thing as an idea whose time has gone, based on the poor quality of the education they deliver. They prey on people's urge to finish quickly, with less effort than a real school, they cost an arm and a leg, and in the long run I'm afraid most recipients of these "degrees" will be found out to be ... well, frauds may be too strong a word, but certainly not qualified.

Specializes in Med/surg, Quality & Risk.

Wow. You should call the Attorney General. That's obnoxious.

My home state has a school that lost their accreditation and crashed and burned. They continued taking students not telling them that they weren't accredited. Half their students are suing for the trouble they're having to go through to get transferred into another school.

Specializes in Adult Internal Medicine.

These schools really bother me for two reasons:

1. They prey on the students that want to get into nursing but don't have the academics. The students should know better but they are blinded.

2. Most if these students take federal loans then default when they fail out or don't pass the NCLEX. We end up paying for them in taxes and the schools just pocket the money.

Specializes in PACU, LTC, Med-Surg, Telemetry, Psych.

There would be some who would pay to get past the BS that is waitlists and entrance process that is most nursing schools.

Thing is, yeah, no legit school would EVER take the credits and if you wanted to one day be a CRNA or NP you would have to start all over. But, for just RN, would it matter? RN and LPN are state board tests. As long as these rip-off colleges did allow you to sit for the NCLEX, it is it really a rip off? Some people would hock thier soul to get out of fast food or some miserable career. Nurses have it pretty good compared to a lot of careers.

Now.. paying that much for any field that is not controlled by a liscensing board... that's a rip off.

Personally, though.. I would have CNA and be in good with folks I worked at to get a job afterwards if I had to go that route. You will not be getting in on merit of the school, for sure.

EDIT: 15k for PCT is a rip off. PCT, with the exception of a very few states that actually have a separate PCT state certification is a rip off. PCT = CNA most places in the country. But once again - must be controlled by a board not to be a rip off.

Funny thing is as I write this, the first Google ad underneath the topic is "Life Experience Degrees - Find Universities Offering Life Skills and Experience Degree LifeExperience.DegreeLeap.com"

What are the odds of that lol.

There is a school that comes to my mind when I read this thread. Carrington college (their third name already, they've had a few name changes...). No pre reqs required and 50 grand. It's very competitive for the community college here as it accepts only 32 students twice a year, so I've personally known two co workers and girls I was in a&p with who failed, and turned to Carrington instead so they could be nurses. It disgusts me that people who fail nursing pre reqs can go pay 50 grand to get their nursing degree from a school that doesn't require anything...

Ridiculous! But how can we find out how good our own school's Nursing program is? Is there a particular website with Nursing program reviews?

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
Ridiculous! But how can we find out how good our own school's Nursing program is? Is there a particular website with Nursing program reviews?
Some state boards of nursing publish a list of all of the approved nursing programs in the state along with the first-time NCLEX pass rates over a period of several years.

Click on the link below to see a list of the schools in Oklahoma along with a 10-year history of NCLEX first-time pass rates. You'll notice that certain schools have consistently low pass rates across the years. http://www.ok.gov/nursing/nclexpass1.pdf

Some state boards of nursing publish a list of all of the approved nursing programs in the state along with the first-time NCLEX pass rates over a period of several years.

Click on the link below to see a list of the schools in Oklahoma along with a 10-year history of NCLEX first-time pass rates. You'll notice that certain schools have consistently low pass rates across the years. http://www.ok.gov/nursing/nclexpass1.pdf

Thank you for this.

In your Experience, is the NCLEX pass rate the only yard stick I should be looking at? I've learned that passing a test is different than actually applying knowledge in the real world.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
Thank you for this.

In your Experience, is the NCLEX pass rate the only yard stick I should be looking at? I've learned that passing a test is different than actually applying knowledge in the real world.

A nursing program's local reputation in the healthcare community also plays a role. In some cities, hospitals employ very unspoken practices of not hiring graduates from certain programs because of a poor local reputation and perceived low quality of the education.

I attend a for profit school...is it expensive-YES. However, my school will become NLNAC accredited in January 2013 and the pass rate for NCLEX is in the 90% range. To me this is all that matters.

If the school is accredited, I will be able to further my education. I called several colleges and they stated "as long as the school is NLNAC accrediated, we will accept the credits."

With that being said, a lot of schools have no intention of becoming NLNAC accredited and people attend these schools because they are told "we are in the process." I don't believe people understand the importance of this accrediation.If the school is not listed on the website under candidacy-the school has no intention of trying.

I live in Florida and diploma mills are EVERYWHERE-one school that I looked at (which will remain nameless because a lot of people on this forum attend this school) bold faced lied to me and said "oh we are in the process." I came home called NLNAC and the rep. told me "no this school hasn't applied for candidacy." So I called the school back and asked when they applied-well the woman seemed to understand that I have done my homework...she actually told me she"had an emergency" and hung up on me. The school charges 60k for a two year degree.

Everyone has to make desicions based on their circumstance-however, attend a school that is NLNAC accredited so you aren't stuck with a degree that isn't worth anything.

BTW if my school doesn't receive the accrediation? I will quit and enroll in an LPN program.