A new report by the Education Trust says that students at for-profit colleges are more likely to drop out and have greater debt than those at public and private non-profit schools. For-profit schools aggressively recruit students, but do little to retain them, with only 22% graduating after six years, compared with 55% at public institutions. 96% of the students who do graduate from for-profit schools are left with large debts, compared with 62% at public schools, and the default rate for these loans is double the rate at public and private non-profit schools, suggesting that the quality of education at these schools is insufficient for graduates to secure well-paying jobs.
Like subprime lenders, for-profit schools prey upon the poor and tend to look the other way and ignore obvious risk factors, accepting anyone who is willing to pay their high tuition and lousy loans.
For more, please see
http://modeducation.blogspot.com/2010/12/for-profit-colleges-are-pedagogical.html