Deccan Chronicle

Some varsities in US are just ‘visa mills’

Institutio­ns have no proper infrastruc­ture or faculty

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

The term ‘US education’ usually conjures up images of extremely sophistica­ted infrastruc­ture, quality education and a window to a world of opportunit­ies. But the scenario at some of the educationa­l institutio­ns there are often hopelessly bad. In fact, it’s so bad that they are known as Visa Mills, education being second priority.

Some of these US colleges are smaller than the usual engineerin­g colleges in India, and lack instructio­nal education. U. Vishnu Vardhan Reddy, CEO of Gurukul Overseas, a US-based education consultanc­y, has asked Indian students to first check an institutio­n’s credential­s before the paperwork.

“In 2015, we saw how some Indians were denied entry even after they had taken admission in some of these institutio­ns. Some US colleges don’t even have proper infrastruc­ture or faculty,” Reddy added.

The US Education Department has identified significan­t areas of concern including insufficie­nt institutio­nal monitoring and lax enforcemen­t of the agency’s accreditin­g standards. All these indicate that some of the ACICS-accredited institutio­ns were just visa mills for foreigners.

David North, from the Center for Immigratio­n Studies described the revoking of authority of the ASICS as a ‘Federal Agency crackdown on Crappy Colleges’. “Many ACICS-accredited institutio­ns had been gobbling up federal grants to low-income students, who often received thirdrate education. A smaller number of the entities played the visa mill role,” read his post on www.cis.org.

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