University of Phoenix

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University of Phoenix
225px
Motto Thinking Ahead'
Type For-profit college
(a wholly owned subsidiary of Apollo Group Inc.)
Established 1976
President Tim Slottow[1]
Academic staff
20,000+
Undergraduates 249,500[2]
Postgraduates 51,300[2]
Location
Phoenix, Arizona (headquarters)
,
United States
Campus Urban
Campus locations 112 campuses and learning centers, online[3]
Website phoenix.edu

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The University of Phoenix (UOPX) is an American for-profit institution of higher learning, headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona, United States. The university has an open-enrollment admission policy, requiring a high-school diploma, GED, or its equivalent as its criterion for admissions.[4] The university has 112 campuses worldwide and confers degrees in over 100 degree programs at the associate, bachelor's, master's and doctoral degree levels.[5] It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Apollo Group Inc., a publicly traded (NASDAQAPOL) Phoenix-based corporation that owns several for-profit educational institutions.

History

The university was founded by John Sperling.[6] Started in 1976 in the Phoenix metropolitan area,[7] the first class consisted of eight students.[8] In 1980, the school expanded to San Jose, California, and in 1989, the university launched its online program.[9]

In 1994, University of Phoenix leaders made the decision to take the parent company, Apollo Group public. Capital from Wall Street launched the school. Phoenix had more than 100,000 students within the first five years of going public.[10] Growth in the company made John Sperling a billionaire.[11]

From 2010 until 2015, enrollment declined more than 50 percent.[12][13]

Campuses

While the school specializes in online programs, the campuses offer additional programs and services.[14] Online students are also able to use tutoring and social centers, which can also be used for social and student meetings. The first center opened in 2007 in Plano, Texas.[15]

Students have access to class-specific online resources, which include an electronic library, textbooks, and other ancillary material required for a course. The university says that the electronic textbooks include search features and hyperlinks to glossary terms that make the books easier to use for research.[16]

Academics

The university offers degree programs through seven colleges and two schools:[17]

  • School of Advanced Studies
  • School of Business
  • College of Criminal Justice and Security
  • College of Education
  • College of Humanities
  • College of Information Systems and Technology
  • College of Natural Sciences
  • College of Nursing
  • College of Social Sciences

In addition to its traditional education programs, the school offers continuing education courses for teachers and practitioners, professional development courses for companies, and specialized courses of study for military personnel.[18]

Students spend 20 to 24 hours with an instructor during each course, compared with about 40 hours at a traditional[vague] university. The university requires students to collaborate by working on learning team projects, wherein the class is divided into learning teams of four to five students. Each learning team is assigned a team forum where team members discuss the project and submit their agreed upon portions of the learning team assignment for compilation by the nominated learning team leader. The concept of learning teams is somewhat uncommon in traditional academia; however, the University of Phoenix believes that collaborating on projects and having individuals rely on each other reflects the real working conditions of the corporate world.[19]

Through its online portal, eCampus, students also have access to software required for coursework. Students have access to virtual companies created by the university to provide students with assignments, which Adam Honea, UOPX's dean and provost, claims are more realistic than those available with case studies.[20] In August 2011, Apollo group announced it would buy 100% of Carnegie Learning to accelerate its efforts to incorporate adaptive learning into its academic platform.[21]

Some academics and former students feel the abbreviated courses and the use of learning teams result in an inferior education.[22][23] The University of Phoenix has been criticized for lack of academic rigor. Henry M. Levin, a professor of higher education at Teachers College at Columbia University, called its business degree an "MBA Lite," saying "I've looked at [its] course materials. It's a very low level of instruction."[22] In May 2008, the university announced the formation of the University of Phoenix National Research Center, designed to study which teaching methods work best for nontraditional students.[24]

Corporate training

The university runs a program called “corporate articulation agreements” that allows people who work at some companies to earn college credit for the training they have completed at their jobs. As of December 2015, the university had agreements in place with around 300 companies. Examples include Amazon Web Services, Baxter Healthcare Corporation, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona, Caterpillar, CBS, Cisco Systems, Colgate-Palmolive, Columbia Sportswear, H&R Block, Honolulu Police Department, In-N-Out Burger, Microsoft, Norwegian Cruise Line, Target, Time Warner Cable, UPS, and the United States Postal Service.[25]

To qualify for college credit, students can either create a professional training portfolio or write an “experiential essay”.[25] A professional training portfolio is a collection of documents such as transcripts from other schools, certificates, licenses, workshops or seminars.[26]

Admissions and financial aid

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The University of Phoenix has an open admissions[when defined as?] policy.[27] In response to complaints[from whom?] about the use of financial aid by for-profit colleges in 2010 the university began an orientation program designed to lower dropout and default rates.[28] Students must successfully complete a three-week orientation workshop in order to be eligible to start their first credit/cost bearing course.[29] Students who do not complete the workshop after two attempts must wait six months before attempting again.

Phoenix recruited students using high-pressure sales tactics[example needed][30] by admissions counselors who are paid, in part[quantify], based on their success in recruiting students.[23] Since 2010, changes were implemented to the way the university recruits students.[31]

The university heavily recruits students and obtains financial aid on their behalf,[30] such as the Academic Competitiveness Grant, Federal Pell Grant, National Science & Mathematics Access to Retain Talent Grant (National SMART Grant), Federal Direct Student Loan Program, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant, Federal Direct PLUS Loans, Federal Perkins Loan, and the Wounded Warrior Project.[32] For the 2008–2009 fiscal year, the University of Phoenix student body received more Pell Grant money ($656.9 million) than any other university.[33]

USA Today has listed University of Phoenix as a "red flag" institution for posting a student loan default rate (26%) that surpassed its graduation rate (17%).[34] A 2010 report found that the University of Phoenix's online graduation rate was only 5 percent.[35]

According to President Obama's White House’s College Scorecard, the University of Phoenix had below average cost and above average salary after attending.[36]

Accreditation

The University of Phoenix has been regionally accredited since 1978 by The Higher Learning Commission (HLC) as a member of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA). In February 2013, a peer review group recommended to the HLC that the university be put on probation because the University of Phoenix "has insufficient autonomy relative to its parent corporation."[37] On May 9, 2013, the Apollo Group filed a report with the Securities and Exchange Commission which stated that the HLC Institutional Actions Council First Committee ("IACFC") had recommended to the HLC that the university retain its regional accreditation, but that the university be placed on "notice" for two years. Their concerns center on the university's governance, student assessment, and faculty scholarship in relation to PhD programs.[38] In July 2015, the Higher Learning Commission removed University of Phoenix from Notice Status.[39]

Some individual colleges within the University of Phoenix hold specialty accreditation or are pre-accredited by accrediting agencies that are recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

  • School of Business – accreditation through the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP).[40] Because Phoenix's business programs are not accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), some companies will not provide tuition reimbursement for employees attending Phoenix.[22][41][42][43]
  • College of Education – Master of Education is accredited by the Teacher Education Accreditation Council (TEAC)[44]
  • College of Nursing – B.S. and M.S. degree programs are accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE),[45]
  • College of Social Sciences – The Master of Science in Counseling program in Community Counseling (Phoenix and Tucson campuses ONLY), the Master of Science in Counseling program in Mental Health Counseling (Utah campuses ONLY), and the Master of Science in Counseling program in Clinical Mental Health Counseling (Phoenix and Tucson campuses ONLY) are accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP).[46]

Organization and administration

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University of Phoenix Stadium, a municipal sports arena for which the corporation paid for naming rights.

University of Phoenix is a wholly owned subsidiary of Apollo Group, a S&P 500 corporation based in Phoenix, Arizona.

Marketing and advertising

Apollo Group, University of Phoenix's parent company, spends between $376 million and $655 million per year on advertising and marketing, which includes the University of Phoenix brand. Much of this advertising is Internet advertising.[47][48]

The university paid $154.5 million for 20-year naming rights for advertising purposes of the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, a municipal sports arena, home of the NFL's Arizona Cardinals, and the site of the NCAA's Fiesta Bowl. The university does not participate in intercollegiate sports.[49]

Political and corporate alliances

Several American policymakers have been affiliated with the University of Phoenix and its parent company, Apollo Group. Former George H. W. Bush appointee and head of the US Department of Education, Margaret Spellings, has been a member of the Apollo Group Board of Directors.[50] Jane Oates, a former staffer for Senator Ted Kennedy and Department of Labor official in the is currently a vice president at Apollo Group.[51] US Representative Nancy Pelosi's close friendship with University of Phoenix founder John Sperling has been documented by Suzanne Mettler in her book Degrees of Inequality.[52] National Action Network's civil rights leader Al Sharpton has also been linked to University of Phoenix, as the sponsor of Education Nation on MSNBC.[53]

University of Phoenix has also had alliances with The American Petroleum Institute [54] and the Boys and Girls Clubs of America.[55] In November 2014, University of Phoenix partnered with 47 historically black colleges and universities to offer UoP classes that transfer to these institutions. [56]

Controversies

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Some critics have alleged that Apollo Group and University of Phoenix prey upon veterans, women, people of color, and socially isolated individuals.[dubious ][57]

A co-founder of University of Phoenix, John D. Murphy, wrote in Mission Forsaken (2013) about the school's devolution from a provider of working adult continuing education programs into a money making machine whose sole criterion for admission was eligibility for federally funded student loans .[58] University of Phoenix was also frequently mentioned in Suzanne Mettler's "Degrees of Inequality" and David Halperin's "Stealing America's Future: How For-Profit Colleges Scam Taxpayers and Ruin Students' Lives."[59][60]

Reporter Aaron Glantz with the Center for Investigative Research has written about University of Phoenix, arguing that it exploits military veterans.[61]

Governmental lawsuits and investigations

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The university has paid several government fines and settled whistle-blower lawsuits concerning its admissions practices and education programs.[62] In 2000, the federal government fined the university $6 million for including study-group meetings as instructional hours. In 2002, the Department of Education relaxed requirements on instructional hours.[22][63]

A 2003 lawsuit filed by two former university recruiters alleged that the university improperly obtained hundreds of millions of dollars in financial aid by paying its admission counselors based on the number of students they enrolled, a violation of the Higher Education Act.[22] The university's parent company settled by paying the government $67.5 million, plus $11 million in legal fees, without admitting any wrongdoing.[64][65]

In 2004, the Department of Education alleged that UOPX again violated Higher Education Act provisions that prohibit offering financial incentives to admission representatives and pressured its recruiters to enroll students.[66] UOPX disputed the findings but paid a $9.8 million fine as part of a settlement where it admitted no wrongdoing and was not required to return any financial aid funds.[67][68][69] The university also paid $3.5 million to the Department of Labor to settle a violation of overtime compensation regarding hours worked by UOPX's recruiters.[70][71] The University of Phoenix settled a false-claims suit for $78.5 million in 2009 over its recruiter-pay practices.[72]

In 2008, the university was the top recipient of student financial aid funds, receiving nearly $2.48 billion.[73] In 2009, the Department of Education produced a report that claimed the untimely return of unearned Title IV funds for more than 10 percent of sampled students. The report also expressed concern that some students register and begin attending classes before completely understanding the implications of enrollment, including their eligibility for student financial aid. In January 2010, the parent company Apollo Group was required to post a letter of credit for $125 million by January 30 of the same year.[74] In 2010, UOPX came under government scrutiny after its Phoenix and Philadelphia campuses were found to have been engaging in deceptive enrollment practices and fraudulent solicitation of FAFSA funds.[75][76]

In 2014 the US Department of Education's Office of the Inspector General demanded records from the University of Phoenix and its parent company Apollo Group going back to 2007 "related to marketing, recruitment, enrollment, financial aid, fraud prevention, [and] student retention."[77]

In October 2015, the U.S. Department of Defense suspended the university ability to recruit on U.S. military bases and receive federal funding for educating members of the U.S. military. In describing the suspension, The Washington Post noted that "the decision arrives amid allegations that the university sponsored recruiting events in violation of an executive order preventing for-profit colleges from gaining preferential access to the military."[78]

People

Students

The University of Phoenix attained a peak enrollment of almost 600,000 students in 2010, but its numbers have declined to 227,000 as of 2015.[79] Various reasons have been given for the enrollment drop (and more than 100 campus closings). An article in the Wall Street Journal attributed the drop to operational changes amid criticism of high debt loads and low job prospects for students of for-profit colleges,[80] while an article in Buzzfeed attributed it to operational changes including the implementation of student orientation, a free three week trial period and a new entrance exam.[81]

The average age of a University of Phoenix undergraduate student is 33. The average graduate student is 36.[82] The university states that nearly two-thirds of its students are women and that a plurality of students attending the school study business (undergraduate students representing 29.9% and graduate students 12.9%), followed closely by those enrolled in Axia College for associate degrees (28.1%).[83][84]

The university graduates the largest number of underrepresented students with master's degrees in business, health care, and education of any U.S. school.[85][86]

In 2013, the US Department of Defense ended its contract with University of Phoenix for military bases in Europe.[87]

When calculated using the standards set by the Department of Education, the university's overall graduation rate is 16 percent, which, when compared to the national average of 55 percent, is among the nation's lowest. The federal standard measures graduation rates as the percentage of first-time undergraduates who obtain a degree within six years.[22]

The university acknowledges the 16-percent graduation rate but takes exception to the standard used by the Department of Education to calculate the rate, saying that the rate is based upon criteria that apply to only seven percent of the university's student population.[23] The university publishes its own graduation rate of 59 percent to account for its large population of non-traditional students.[22]

Faculty

The university's faculty consists of approximately 1,500 core faculty and 20,000 associate (part-time or adjunct) faculty members who all hold graduate degrees.[88]

UoP depends heavily on contingent faculty: 95 percent of Phoenix instructors teach part-time, compared to an average of 47 percent nationwide. This reliance on part-time faculty has been criticized by regulators and academic critics. Most of the classes are centrally crafted and standardized to ensure consistency and to maximize profits. Additionally, no faculty members get tenure.[22][23]

According to a university officer, pre-screened instructional candidates participate in a training program in the discipline in which they teach, which has the effect of weeding out 40 percent to 50 percent of the "less-committed" or -capable applicants.[89]

African-Americans make up 18.6 percent of the university's 22,000 faculty members, and 5.6 percent are Latino [90] Women make up 57% of the faculty.[90]

Adjuncts make approximately $1000–$2000 per course. [91]

Alumni

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As of March 2010, 538,000 people had graduated from the university.[17] Phoenix alumni in the government sector include White House cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt,[92] former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters ('94),[93] and member of the Utah House of Representatives Brad Dee ('91).[94]

In military and law enforcement, alumni include U.S. Navy Admiral Kirkland H. Donald,[95] and Director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Harold Hurtt ('91).[96] MSNBC anchor and a host of NBC's Early Today Christina Brown is also an alumna of the university.[97]

Athletes who have earned degrees from the university include four-time NBA Championship-winner Shaquille O'Neal ('05),[98] three-time WNBA MVP Lisa Leslie,[99] and professional tennis player Michael Russell ('12).[100]

See also

References

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Further reading

External links