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Sunday, July 6, 2008

Collection of Links to Stories About "Diploma Mills" Issue

From our favorite email newsletter, The Scout Report, is this set of links on the recently heating up topic of "diploma mills":
Diploma Mills Continue To Be An Area of Concern for the Federal
Government
The unsavory world of diploma mills is a complex one, and a number of
government agencies have attempted to regulate their activities with varying
degrees of success. The Internet has aided operators of these educational
"institutions" who frequently offer advanced degrees for little, or more
often, no coursework. This past Sunday the New York Times reported on the
case of Dixie and Steven K. Randock Sr. from the town of Colbert,
Washington. The Randocks have been accused of operating more than 120
fictitious universities, and the federal government's concern goes beyond
the mere matter of a phony degree. Law-enforcement officials fear that the
growth of such diploma mills offers terrorists the potential to obtain bogus
degrees in order to obtain visas in the United States. At the state level,
about 20 states have passed laws to prohibit the trade in phony diplomas,
but the U.S. Congress seems to be moving a bit more slowly on the issue.
[KMG]

The first link will take visitors to a New York Times article from this
Sunday about the world of diploma mills. The second link leads to a piece
from Dan Walters of The Modesto Bee which talks about a bill in California
that would effectively crack down on diploma mills. Moving on, the third
link leads to a timely piece of commentary from former university president
Stephen Joel Trachtenberg on diploma mills, which appeared in the Chronicle
of Higher Education this week. The fourth link leads to another special
report from the Chronicle of Higher Education by Thomas Bartlett and Scott
Smallwood, which investigates the profusion of dubious doctorates in the
education sector. The fifth link will lead visitors to the U.S. Department
of Education's Database of Accredited Postsecondary Institutions and
Programs, which can help those wondering about the authenticity of an
institution.  Lastly, a link to the Federal Trade Commission's page on how
to avoid "fake-degree burns" is offered for additional information and
assistance. [KMG]
Copyright Internet Scout, 1994-2008.

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