| 
			Madigan calls on Duncan to 
			strengthen regulation of for-profit colleges 
			
   Attorney general files comments with 
			Department of Education to better protect students against abusive 
			industry practices 
			 
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            [June 08, 2013] 
            CHICAGO -- Attorney General Lisa 
			Madigan has urged U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan to 
			strengthen oversight of for-profit colleges and filed comments this 
			week with the Department of Education in support of requiring 
			schools to ensure students can pay off their loans and to make more 
			accurate and complete disclosures about their job placement rates.  | 
			
            |  "Too often, with promises of higher-paying salaries and better job prospects, 
young people in Illinois and across the country have been lured into taking on 
huge amounts of debt to pursue diplomas at for-profit schools," Madigan said. 
"Yet, over and over again, many of these institutions' promises have proven 
empty, and young people have paid the price, going deeply into debt to pursue 
diplomas that leave them without better job prospects or higher salaries." 
 Many for-profit colleges and universities have achieved eligibility to 
receive federal student aid by providing programs "to prepare students for 
gainful employment in a recognized occupation," pursuant to the Higher Education 
Act. Yet, Madigan said, more clarity is needed to define "gainful employment," 
given evidence in Illinois that some for-profit schools make deceptive claims to 
prospective students that induce them to enroll and take on excessive debt 
loads, only to discover upon graduation that their degree fails to qualify them 
for a job in their chosen career. 
 Madigan's comments cited a review of more than 1,500 student complaints as 
part of her ongoing investigation of the for-profit school industry's deceptive 
marketing and lending practices. Based on that review, Madigan recommended the 
Department of Education strengthen its rules to ensure for-profit schools meet 
the obligation to prepare students for gainful employment in a recognized 
occupation. Specifically, Madigan recommended that:  
	
	For-profit schools should be 
	required to meet thresholds for their students' debt-to-income ratios and 
	repayment rates.
	For-profit schools should be 
	required to make clear job placement disclosures so students understand how 
	many graduates of their programs find jobs in their fields.
	For-profit schools should be 
	restricted from finding new accreditors after a prior accreditor cites them 
	for poor practices.
	For-profit schools should be required to provide 
	students with clear, understandable disclosures about their programmatic 
	accreditations and what effect those accreditations, or the lack thereof, 
	have on students' job prospects.  
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
			The comments filed Tuesday are Madigan's latest effort to address 
			abusive marketing and advertising tactics in the for-profit school 
			industry. In 2012, Madigan filed a lawsuit against the national 
			for-profit school Westwood College, alleging Westwood left many 
			students with anywhere from $50,000 to $70,000 in debt for degrees 
			that failed to qualify them for their chosen careers. The lawsuit 
			alleges that Westwood downplayed the ultimate cost of attending the 
			college and failed to provide students with sufficient information 
			about their loans. Madigan also settled a national lawsuit with the 
			company behind www.GIBill.com for deceptively steering U.S. service 
			members and veterans to use their federal education benefits with 
			the company's preferred clients in the for-profit schools industry. 
			Madigan has also testified before Congress on growing concerns about 
			the industry. 
[Text from file received from the office
of
Illinois Attorney General Lisa 
Madigan] 
 
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