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It also may mean student loan programs finally have begun to work as they should. Not everyone is cut out to spend four years in a dorm at State U. Some must work as they attend college. Others spent the traditional college years on other pursuits and are trying to catch up and get a degree while juggling family and career responsibilities. Still others don’t get serious about doing the work it takes to obtain a degree until they’ve spent a few years in the workforce.

As a result, they are looking for different things in a college than other students. They like the convenience of online courses or night school. They have no use for the traditional accoutrements of campus life – the student union, expensive climbing walls, student activities, ball games and the like.

But these students also are at higher risk of dropping out. For some, their student skills decline as they spend years away from a classroom, and they aren’t prepared for college work in the 21st century. Others find the problems with motivation and focus that prevented them from seeking a degree right after high school return once again.

But none of this can or should be blamed on for-profit schools. They take a chance on students who may have had difficulty in getting into State U. They offer courses community colleges don’t or can’t because of budget constraints. They offer opportunities that simply wouldn’t be available for some students. They may cost more than community colleges, which are heavily subsidized by taxpayers, but nobody is forced to sign up.

Harkin also makes the argument that many for-profit schools offer classes that aren’t accredited – or not sufficiently so. Colleges seek accreditation so students who receive their degrees can be considered for jobs in the students’ chosen profession and so students who transfer can receive proper credit for classes they’ve already taken.

But a great many of these for-profit schools are accredited, and it’s not like those schools that aren’t hide the accreditation status of their programs. Students can find out upfront which programs have received full regional accreditation and which haven’t and make their decisions accordingly.

Finally, there is profit envy to consider. The inability of state universities to control costs has contributed significantly to the rise of for-profit schools. For-profits have capitalized on this by reshaping and expanding their operations to cater to a new generation of student. And don’t think state or private colleges don’t make a profit; call it a surplus, but how else can they continue without bringing in more than they spend.

Eisman testified that the CEO of one for-profit university makes 25 times as much money as the president of Harvard. He also decries profit margins in the 40 percent range and the rapid growth of for-profit schools. But neither Eisman nor Harkin explained why the president of a for-profit would make more than the president of Harvard. Could it be because he has established something, rather than presided over something hundreds of years in the making? Could the profit margins signify a new approach to how education is marketed that perhaps state universities and even traditional private universities may want to emulate?

Of course not. This is nothing more than the usual fear among the Harkins of the world that someone somewhere is making a buck and government better rush to stop it. And as usual, that buck is being earned because a new merchant has developed a new product that meets new needs.

Heather Smith is a writer and producer based in Washington, DC.

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