Articles
 
Print

College Degree Mills: What Are They and How the Scam Works

Diploma Mill Police  >  Degree Mills, What They Are and How To Avoid Them
By Vicky Phillips, Chief Education Analyst   
 
“Pssst! Wanna buy a fake degree?”

Thousands of people do so, every day.

Some consumers realize what they are doing, but an escalating number are being duped by online college scams that operate sophisticated Internet fraud schemes that promise consumers they can get a degree fast online. These phony online colleges thrive on selling fake diplomas.

The diploma mill industry, essentially colleges that sell fake educational credentials or diplomas—has experienced a surge in the last decade. These education scams prey on consumer ignorance about terms like "accreditation" and "licensing."

A college degree is the second most expensive purchase most people will make in their lifetime—second only to the purchase of a home. Without a college degree, careers remain stalled, wages low. For this reason, the sale of cheap instant bogus online degrees has become big business.



A diploma mill, also known as a degree mill, is any bogus university that essentially sells college diplomas— the piece of paper itself rather than the educational experience. Diploma mills literally crank out fake paper diplomas to anyone who pays the requested "tuition" amount—generally a lump sum of about $300-$2,000.

“Diploma mills (or degree mills) are substandard or fraudulent ‘colleges’ that offer potential students degrees with little or no serious work,” says Alan Contreras, administrator of the Office of Degree Authorization for the Oregon Student Assistance Commission.

A diploma mill typically employs a high-pressure sales forces that specialize in aggressive telephone and email tactics. Some mills have been operating for decades. They avoid prosecution by changing their state of operation, by changing their name, or by locating themselves in states or foreign countries with the weakest educational laws.




Education represents a $900 billion market in the United States. Education, as a market, is second only to healthcare when measured as percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

It never occurs to most to question a college. This lack of questioning has increased the popularity of degree mills and online education fraud.

This amount of money has encouraged for-profit entities to enter the field of distance learning in record numbers. As profit has replaced public good (the historical goal of non-profit enterprises), corruption has become inevitable.

Blind public trust of higher education, combined with unfiltered advertising opportunities via the Internet, have combined to create a perfect storm that has allowed fake online colleges and universities to proliferate and profit at rates even cockroaches would envy.




Diploma mills cast an ominous shadow on the field of distance learning. The selling of unearned degrees is a part of what UNESCO’s International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) refers to as “an epidemic of corruption worldwide” in higher education.

While most think of education corruption as associated with developing countries, UNESCO has identified the United States as ground zero for education fraud, largely because of the rising popularity of online education.

Speaking to the Chronicle of Higher Education in 2007, one of the authors of the UNESCO report, Jacques Hallack, a professor in France, fingered the Internet as the prime vehicle for the global spread of credentials from unregulated United States entities calling themselves “colleges” and “universities.”

The United States has no national or federal requirement that a college be accredited by a recognized agency; this lack of regulation has turned the United States into Education Scam Central. American diploma mills specialize in using the Internet to export fake credentials to a global marketplace desperate for higher education access.

In the United States over the last four decades, the sheer number of those who hold college degrees has continued to spiral. According to the Census Bureau's National Center for Education Statistics, in 1964 less than 10 percent of the population held bachelors degrees; by 2004 that number had spiked to 30 percent.

In 2010 it is expected that more than 70 percent of high school graduates will seek admission to some sort of college or university system. Americans are literally storming the doors of online higher education.

Many employers expect applicants to hold a college degree, even for entry-level positions.

In many careers, such as teaching, business, nursing, psychology and library science, the masters degree is now considered mandatory.

At the same time, the cost of a college degree has escalated at inflationary rates that surpass precious metals.

According to the College Board, the average sticker price for a bachelors degree during the 2008 school year is: $25,000 at a public school; $95,000 at a private school.


By comparison, surveys of twenty-five North American college diploma mills performed by GetEducated.com in 2010 revealed the average cost of a fake diploma for an online bachelors degree to have dropped to only about $399. (The price tag is $100-$200 more if the “student” wishes to "graduate" with honors.)

For many Americans, $399 seems a tempting bargain for a piece of paper that will determine their salary in a troubled job market.

As the economy tightens, the diploma mill industry will continue to expand, offering American workers a tempting opportunity to purchase paper pedigrees and buy a college degree fast.




GetEducated.com Diploma Mill Police
Are Life Experience Online Degrees All Scams?
Top 10 Signs: Real College Degree or Diploma Mill?
Online College Degree Mills: How Prevalent Are They?
Regional vs. National Accreditation: Which is Better?
Unrecognized and Fake Agencies for Online College Accreditation
Kitty Cat Earns Life Experience Online Degree, with Honors



© 2010-2011 GetEducated.com, Get Educated, Inc. (TM)