Naughty and Nice
Higher Ed Watch
Santa has some tough decisions to make this Christmas. We've decided to help him out with our own list of who's been naughty and who's been nice this year in higher education.
Let us know who, if anyone, you think should be added to the list by posting a comment below. Happy Holidays to all! We look forward to adding many more names to the "nice" list in 2008.
NAUGHTY
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The leaders of Student Loan Xpress, for trying to curry favor with key financial aid administrators, as well as with a top Education Department official, by providing them with cut-rate insider shares of company stock. The student loan scandals wouldn’t have been the same without them.
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Sallie Mae CEO Al Lord, for his insatiable drive for profits, and for his company's efforts to monopolize the student loan industry. Federal investigators are investigating whether he engaged in insider trading when he sold 400,000 shares of his company’s stock just days before President Bush proposed slashing lender subsidies in his budget request. His company’s cozy relations with colleges, often to the detriment of students, are also under scrutiny. But at least investors may finally be tiring of his antics and arrogance – their frustration over his intemperate remarks during a conference call sent the company’s stock plunging.
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Loan to Learn CEO Catherine Reynolds, for abusing her student loan company’s non-profit status to enrich herself and her family and to raise her social standing. It takes a real philanthropist to try to persuade students to take out high-cost private loans before exhausting their eligibility for federal loans.
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Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, for his genuflection to Nelnet. Waiving the $1 million fine he issued against the loan provider — who just happens to be a sizeable campaign contributor — is bad, but then calling a company that bilked U.S. taxpayers out of millions of dollars "ethical," "decent," and "honest"? Sounds to us like someone drank too much of Michael Dunlap’s Kool-Aid.
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The Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Authority (PHEAA), a non-profit student loan agency, for showering its board members and their wives with extravagant gifts, such as falconry lessons and facials, all on the taxpayer’s dime. We hope at least some of the more than $35 million in taxpayer money that PHEAA improperly claimed on 9.5 percent loans is going to good use.
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Florida State’s football players, at least 20 of whom were suspended from playing in the Music City Bowl and several games next season, for cheating on an online music history exam. And let’s not forget the two teams participating in the National Championship game—Ohio State and LSU—who ended up at the bottom of Higher Ed Watch’s Academic BCS poll with abysmal graduation rates of 48 percent and 38 percent respectively, and around 20 percentage point gaps between the graduation rates of their white and black players.
NICE
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New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, for working tirelessly to expose widespread abuses that have occurred in the federal and private student loan programs that have left financially-needy students vulnerable to predatory lenders. In so doing, he has put the leadership of the U.S. Education Department to shame for turning a blind eye to problems that have long been obvious to observers of the loan industry. He could have given Higher Ed Watch more credit for our role in exposing malfeasance, but he is a New York politician after all.
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Student journalists at the University of Texas and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, for taking the initiative to investigate the relationships between their financial aid offices and student loan companies, and uncovering lists of "lender treats" and lender stock held by a university-affiliated foundation.
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Representatives Thomas Petri (R-WI) and George Miller (D-CA) and Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA). Not for the fact that we love having to run disclosures every time we mention their names, but for their hard work on New America’s student loan auction proposal, damning reports of improprieties in the student loan industry, and most important, developing and passing crucial legislation cutting excess lender subsidies and increasing the maximum Pell Grant award. It's the largest increase in financial aid since the GI Bill, and these three legislators deserve heaps of praise for the accomplishment. [Disclosure: the Editor of Higher Ed Watch used to work for Kennedy and one of our writers used to work for Petri.]
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Amherst, Arizona State, Columbia, Davidson, Duke, Emory, Louisville, Miami (Ohio), Pomona, South Texas, Swarthmore, Tufts, UPenn, Wesleyan, and Williams for their announcement of policies that make it easier financially for low-income students to attend their respective institutions. Sorry Harvard, but in our book, $180,000 a year is not middle-income. But don’t worry, you still get a gold star for spending some of your endowment.
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The financial aid offices at Colorado State University and Barnard College, for proactively counseling their students on private loan options and exhausting federal loan eligibility—and at Barnard, for reducing private loan volume by a shocking 73 percent.
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Boston College’s football team—for winning Higher Ed Watch’s Academic BCS poll after graduating 87 percent of its players—only four percentage points lower than the school’s overall graduation rate—and posting a very high Academic Progress Rate of 976, 42 points above the Division I-A median. Even if they hate us for criticizing their (and other schools') strategic use of redshirting. No hard feelings, right?
Editor's Note: Higher Ed Watch is going on a Holiday vacation for the next two weeks. We'll be back blogging away come Tuesday, January 8th.
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Santa needs to check his list twice
Looks like Santa has developed a student loan bias. Mrs. Claus must not have been able to keep him away from the NAF blogs this year. He forgot the most naughty of them all-the Ivory Tower! The Ivory Tower raised prices on good little boys and girls faster than inflation this year yet again!
Ho, ho, ho, uh-oh!
The Party's Over Patrick
Hate to tell you Patrick, but the party's over. Your foul-mouthed blowhard of a boss has driven your company's stock down to $18.00 a share as of this afternoon. It's only a matter of time before Al Lord, Enzi, Boehner, Rick Keller, Buck McKeon, and Margaret Spellings are all under indictment. The Cuomo inquiry is only the beginning. Insofar as universities supposedly are raising tuition faster than the rate of inflation -- anyone who has purchased gasoline, healthcare, childcare, or milk (or any other protein product) understands that the real rate of inflation is running about 10-12% annually. No one believes the fairytales coming out of the Bush Commerce Department.
My Xmas present to you Jason.........
Now see if you can find any parallels with your expensive milk (after reading the below) and the current status quo in higher education:
However, other researchers report that the production of ethanol consumes more energy than it yields. Environmentalists, livestock farmers, and opponents of subsidies say that increased ethanol production won't meet energy goals and may damage the environment as food prices soar. Some of the controversial subsidies in the past have included more than $10 billion to Archer-Daniels-Midland since 1980. Critics also speculate that as ethanol is more widely used, changing irrigation practices could greatly increase pressure on water resources. In October 2007, 28 environmental groups decried the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS), a legislative effort intended to increase ethanol production, and said that the measure will "lead to substantial environmental damage and a system of biofuels production that will not benefit family farmers...will not promote sustainable agriculture and will not mitigate global climate change." Recent articles have also blamed subsidized ethanol production for the nearly 200% increase in milk prices since 2004, although that is disputed by some.
Dumb G policies have a way of taking away the punch from the party don't they Jason? Happy Holidays! Party on, dude!
P>S>the CPI is more than food and energy prices, half-truths during Xmas time are unbecoming!
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