G. Blumenstyk. Chronicle of Higher Education, (2005)
Zusammenfassung
This article reports on recent developments associated with for-profit higher education institutes of the United States. For-profit higher education has continued to grow at a pace that once seemed unsustainable, thanks to an influx of capital, a favorable regulatory climate, and the industry's own nimble reaction to the changing demands of students. Of the 20 million students enrolled at degree-granting colleges in 2015, one out of 10 now attends a for-profit college. Early on, most for-profit colleges flourished by enrolling older, working adults. The growth over the last decade has come from traditional students.
%0 Journal Article
%1 blumenstyk_for-profit_2005-1
%A Blumenstyk, Goldie
%D 2005
%J Chronicle of Higher Education
%K EDUCATION EDUCATION, FOR-profit Higher PRIVATE States UNITED UNIVERSITIES United \& colleges state universities
%P A14
%T For-profit uutlook
%U /brokenurl#EBSCO prm html http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=40&hid=15&sid=edc4e49c-fccd-4451-b68b-5f967718a4a2%40sessionmgr8
%V 52
%X This article reports on recent developments associated with for-profit higher education institutes of the United States. For-profit higher education has continued to grow at a pace that once seemed unsustainable, thanks to an influx of capital, a favorable regulatory climate, and the industry's own nimble reaction to the changing demands of students. Of the 20 million students enrolled at degree-granting colleges in 2015, one out of 10 now attends a for-profit college. Early on, most for-profit colleges flourished by enrolling older, working adults. The growth over the last decade has come from traditional students.
@article{blumenstyk_for-profit_2005-1,
abstract = {This article reports on recent developments associated with for-profit higher education institutes of the United States. For-profit higher education has continued to grow at a pace that once seemed unsustainable, thanks to an influx of capital, a favorable regulatory climate, and the industry's own nimble reaction to the changing demands of students. Of the 20 million students enrolled at degree-granting colleges in 2015, one out of 10 now attends a for-profit college. Early on, most for-profit colleges flourished by enrolling older, working adults. The growth over the last decade has come from traditional students.},
added-at = {2018-06-19T15:18:45.000+0200},
author = {Blumenstyk, Goldie},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/275a8d92b5c62bc5d379deaa4bc0aed9a/prophe},
interhash = {2676ffe0bd25e37799600913419b9183},
intrahash = {75a8d92b5c62bc5d379deaa4bc0aed9a},
journal = {Chronicle of Higher Education},
keywords = {EDUCATION EDUCATION, FOR-profit Higher PRIVATE States UNITED UNIVERSITIES United \& colleges state universities},
pages = {A14},
shorttitle = {For-profit uutlook},
timestamp = {2018-06-19T15:18:45.000+0200},
title = {For-profit uutlook},
url = {/brokenurl#EBSCO prm html http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=40&hid=15&sid=edc4e49c-fccd-4451-b68b-5f967718a4a2%40sessionmgr8},
volume = 52,
year = 2005
}