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On July 25, 2003, a CBS Evening News story on digital diploma mills interviewed George Gollin, a professor at the University of Illinois, who has researched the
growth of fraudulent online programs. He comments that degrees
including PhDs are readily available even though "There are no lectures, no staff, no faculty,...just phony documents passed off as legitimate degrees." For
those of us who actually teach at legitimate schools where
students invest tuition and years of work to earn their degrees,
diploma mills are troublesome. For Sloan-C members who share
the purpose of making quality education affordable and accessible,
the proliferation of mills is more than troubling because they
undermine public acceptance of online learning, feeding doubts
about the unknown.
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Higher education
in the United States is governed largely by the states, more
so than by a federal agency or ministry as in most other countries.
With the exception federal financial aid programs, most regulations
and all charters for colleges and universities come from state
education departments not from the federal government. Once a
charter has been awarded, the evaluation of a school is largely
the domain of accrediting agencies that have been formed regionally,
by discipline, or by the nature of a program. The regional accrediting
organizations— Middle
States Association of Colleges and Schools (MSA), New
England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC-CIHE), North
Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA-HLC), Northwest
Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities (NWA), Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS), Western Association
of Schools and Colleges (WASC-ACSU; WASC-ACCJC)—depend
upon the voluntary membership of schools, all of whom submit
to accreditation reviews conducted by peers selected from member
colleges and universities. |
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The legitimacy of accrediting agencies
themselves is overseen by the Council
for Higher Education (CHEA). Accreditation in the United
States is not mandatory, and although some states have begun
to tighten regulations for accreditation (Illinois, Idaho, Oregon),
most have not. In fact, federal government and state education
departments would have difficulty regulating Internet activities
including online education that goes on beyond their borders.
Moreover, considering colleagues in K-12 schools who are struggling
to implement the mandates of the "No Child Left Behind" (Elementary
and Secondary Education) Act, an important question is how higher
education would benefit from more government oversight.
In the final analysis, digital diploma
mills will be with us for many years to come as unscrupulous
providers attract naïve or unscrupulous customers willing to
pay for bogus degrees.
Part of the solution to questions about integrity is for higher education to support quality claims with empirical evidence. In fact, more and more, accrediting agencies are requiring formal outcomes assessment measures as part of accreditation reviews. Also helpful are voluntary "seal of approval" organizations that collect and publicize information on quality online schools and programs. The Sloan Consortium, for example, publishes information about online programs that adhere to its quality principles.
The task for faculty and administration is to continue to support quality and assessment of academic programs for the vast majority of the 15 million postsecondary students in the United States who attend legitimate colleges and universities, and for the growing percentage of them who choose online learning.
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