Monday, 27 June 2011

HOW NOT TO FALL INTO A TRI-VALLEY TRAP

In order to avoid falling in Tri-Valley like trap, this is what unassuming students can do.

1.Find out who is the accreditor? A mere accreditation doesn’t mean it is a quality institution. Just as there are diploma mills churning out fake degrees, there are accreditation mills that sell accreditation.

2. Visit CHEA’s website:  http://www.chea.org/ It has a database of accredited institutions and programmes.  Apart from CHEA, a few websites have names of some non-accredited schools. For example this link has partial listing of non-accredited schools: http://www.michigan.gov/documents/Non-accreditedSchools_78090_7.pdf.

3. The notion that suffixes like ‘.edu’(education) and ‘.ac’(academic) is for legitimate academic organizations, is false. Noted US-based writer John Bear also cautions edu being in the domain name. He says, ”There are many degree mills that insert ‘ edu’ into their domain name, but not as suffix for example. ‘schoolname_edu.com”.

4. Check if the attractive building or a huge campus on the college’s website is indeed the college’s property and not rented for a ceremony. One of the clever marketing techniques is false depiction of the campus.

5. Only virtual presence-Some fake institutions may exist in the world of Internet only. There is no real infrastructure and changing addresses is easy.

6. Get regular updates on dedicated blogsites like http://diplomamillnews.blogspot.com/ .

7. Check out the rankings is also a good way of knowing about credibility of an institution. Website of ‘US News & World Report’ and ‘Princeton Review’ is a good idea, suggests Vivian Doskow, a 2010 graduate student from New York. 

8. States like Idaho, Hawaii, Montana and California have low or doubtful standard academic institutions.
9.Some US states like Oregon gives a list worldwide schools unacceptable to them. For e.g., “Schools that are not Authorized to Offer Degrees in the State of Oregon” , check out at http://www.osac.state.or.us/oda/unaccredited.aspx.

10. Alumni Descriptions: If the school boasts of an impressive list of alumini or produces a long list in its short existence, it should ring an alarm bell.

11.  US-bound students can also consult educational advisers at the United States-India Educational Foundation (USIEF). Says Adam J. Grotsky, executive director, “USIEF is ready to assist students and parents in their endeavour to identify US institutions where they will have a satisfying experience.” Details of their services to students are available at www.usief.org.in 

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2 Comments:

At 27 June 2011 at 09:42 , Blogger Omprakash said...

Education has become business and these are tools/tricks to catch unaware youth's. Appreciate for the hard work in collecting and putting relevant details.. this will surely help in differentiating between genuine and fraud institute.

 
At 30 June 2011 at 03:26 , Blogger Shiphony said...

Impressive reporting! Smashing pointers.

 

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