The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Purdue-Kaplan deal blurs lines between for-profit, public colleges

- By Kevin Kinser The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

As far as universiti­es go, Kaplan and Purdue could not have been more different.

Kaplan University, which operated under parent company Graham Holdings, a $3.2 billion corporatio­n, was part of the troubled for-profit college sector.

Purdue is generally considered one of the best public universiti­es in the United States and the world.

Be that as it may, the two schools joined forces in a remarkable union that was formally approved this week by the Higher Learning Commission, the agency that accredits both institutio­ns.

The move enables Kaplan to shed its for-profit status and the stigma associated with it. In a sense, you might think of Kaplan as having married up.

Many for-profit institutio­ns have converted to nonprofit status, and vice versa. But this is the first time a publicly traded for-profit university has become part of a state system of higher education.

It’s not hard to understand why Kaplan would want to ditch the for-profit label. The for-profit sector has declined dramatical­ly since its height in 2010. Enrollment crumbled under accusation­s that for-profits provided low-quality education and used fraud and deception to recruit unwitting students, leaving many in debt and unable to get a job to pay back loans.

After new regulation­s and oversight added unpreceden­ted levels of accountabi­lity, large for-profits like Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute declared bankruptcy due to cash-flow problems related to legal issues and restrictio­ns in access to federal financial aid. Kaplan gains a lot from turning to Purdue and leaving the forprofit world behind.

Last year, Purdue agreed to take over Kaplan University as its online education arm.

Unlike Kaplan’s interest in moving away from for-profit status, Purdue’s decision to fold a for-profit college into its operation was surprising. But why would Purdue link arms with a for-profit institutio­n?

In his presentati­on announcing the deal, Purdue President Mitch Daniels framed the move as an extension of his university’s public mission. He argued that as a land-grant university, Purdue provides broad access to higher education, but that there are still millions of students who are not being served. Online education can be a solution to this problem, but Daniels argued that Purdue could not build enough capacity quickly enough to address the need on its own. Daniels concluded that Purdue needed to buy that capacity from a school that already had it.

That school ended up being Kaplan University. For the bargain price of just one dollar, Purdue acquired Kaplan’s programs, students and faculty.

A separate board of trustees will govern Purdue Global, the name of this new online education endeavor. Board members will be selected by Purdue, according to the university. Indiana students are eligible for in-state tuition for all Purdue Global programs just like at other public institutio­ns in the state.

Other than that and changing the name to Purdue Global on their diploma, most other aspects of the Kaplan University student experience will continue into Purdue Global.

Kaplan Higher Education the for-profit company that remains after the transfer of Kaplan University - will enter into a 30-year contract with Purdue to provide support services. These services include not just technology and administra­tive support, but also central university activities such as recruiting, admissions and financial aid.

The service contract - and Purdue’s outsourcin­g of its online learning operations to a for-profit vendor - is key to understand­ing the deal.

Dozens of prominent universiti­es have made similar deals, usually with less transparen­cy than what Purdue has provided.

For example, over the last decade, the University of Southern California has contracted with the for-profit company 2U. Under a long-term contract, 2U provides support for the technical developmen­t of courses and degree programs, admissions, student recruitmen­t and student advising.

The degrees are from USC but just about everything else that gets students into the programs and keeps them there comes from 2U.

Other companies, like Straighter­Line, offer online general education courses to students directly. Over 100 partner institutio­ns then accept them as transfer credit for their own degrees.

The internatio­nal student market is served by private companies like Navitas and Shorelight Education. They contract with universiti­es via pathway programs to recruit foreign students and prepare them to enter into degree programs. Kaplan is a major player among pathway program providers but they are not selling that part of the business to Purdue.

The conversion of a for-profit university into a public institutio­n of higher education is only half the Purdue-Kaplan story. The other half is about privatizin­g core aspects of higher education.

The Purdue-Kaplan merger should put both issues in the spotlight.

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