BibSonomy bookmarks for /tag/Growthhttps://www.bibsonomy.org/tag/GrowthBibSonomy RSS Feed for /tag/GrowthBeyond Growth 2023: Ist Schrumpfung die einzige Option, um den Planeten zu retten? | Euronews 21.5.2023Mehrere Teilnehmer:innen der Konferenz BeyondGrowth 2023, die diese Woche im Europäischen Parlament stattfand, fordern dazu auf, nicht mehr dem Wachstum hinterherzulaufen.https://de.euronews.com/2023/05/19/beyond-growth-2023-ist-schrumpfung-die-einzige-option-um-den-planeten-zu-rettenmeneteqel2023-06-18T16:38:33+02:00European_Parliament etuc growth just_transition <span itemprop="description">Mehrere Teilnehmer:innen der Konferenz BeyondGrowth 2023, die diese Woche im Europäischen Parlament stattfand, fordern dazu auf, nicht mehr dem Wachstum hinterherzulaufen.</span>Growth and protein content of mud crabs (Scylla serrata) fed with different natural feeds | Research Paper by JBES JournalsMr. Leilidyn Y Zurbano*, Mary Lynn M Mariposque, Lyka M Buenaobra, and Mr. John Christopher Marquez from the institute of the Agribusiness Department, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Lopez Quezon, Philippines, developed a research work entitled "Growth and protein content of mud crabs (Scylla serrata) fed with different natural feeds," published by the Journal of Biodiversity and Environmental Sciences | JBES, on March issue 2021, Volume 18, under the publication of the International Network For Natural Sciences | INNSPUB.https://innspubnet.blogspot.com/2022/05/growth-and-protein-content-of-mud-crabs.htmlinnspubnet2022-05-31T12:42:18+02:00content crabs growth mud protein <span itemprop="description">Mr. Leilidyn Y Zurbano*, Mary Lynn M Mariposque, Lyka M Buenaobra, and Mr. John Christopher Marquez from the institute of the Agribusiness Department, Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Lopez Quezon, Philippines, developed a research work entitled "Growth and protein content of mud crabs (Scylla serrata) fed with different natural feeds," published by the Journal of Biodiversity and Environmental Sciences | JBES, on March issue 2021, Volume 18, under the publication of the International Network For Natural Sciences | INNSPUB.</span>Why encouraging kids to talk to themselves could help their math scores - CNNhttps://amp-cnn-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2019/12/17/health/math-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn/index.html?usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D&_js_v=0.1#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s&share=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2019%2F12%2F17%2Fhealth%2Fmath-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn%2Findex.htmlbshanks2021-09-28T06:33:15+02:00child grow growth mindset talk <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2021-09-28T06:33:15+02:00" href="https://amp-cnn-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2019/12/17/health/math-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn/index.html?usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D&amp_js_v=0.1#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2019%2F12%2F17%2Fhealth%2Fmath-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn%2Findex.html" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://amp-cnn-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2019/12/17/health/math-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn/index.html?usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D&amp_js_v=0.1#referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2019%2F12%2F17%2Fhealth%2Fmath-kids-positive-talk-effort-scn%2Findex.html</a>Brooke N. Macnamara on Twitter: "We examined 6 key claims of mindset theory. The strongest association (r=−.12) was in the opposite direction from the theory's claim. We suggest the foundations of mindset theory are not firm and that bold claims about mindset appear to be overstated. 1/8 https://t.co/EfZU0lF0yP https://t.co/eHaUq0ubZu" / Twitterhttps://twitter.com/BrookeMacnamara/status/1224716904574545920bshanks2021-09-27T17:25:10+02:00growth mindset <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2021-09-27T17:25:10+02:00" href="https://twitter.com/BrookeMacnamara/status/1224716904574545920" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://twitter.com/BrookeMacnamara/status/1224716904574545920</a>How a 'growth mindset' can lead to success | Hacker Newshttps://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22561638bshanks2021-09-27T17:25:06+02:00growth mindset <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2021-09-27T17:25:06+02:00" href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22561638" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22561638</a>How a 'growth mindset' can lead to success - BBC Worklifehttps://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200306-the-surprising-truth-about-finding-your-passion-at-workbshanks2021-09-27T17:23:28+02:00growth passion <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2021-09-27T17:23:28+02:00" href="https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200306-the-surprising-truth-about-finding-your-passion-at-work" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200306-the-surprising-truth-about-finding-your-passion-at-work</a>The 5 Types of Network Effects and How to Hack Them - By Matt Wardhttps://hackernoon.com/the-5-types-of-network-effects-and-how-to-hack-them-a5b54745eed2gujyhu2019-10-22T17:08:23+02:00growth network-effects strategy types <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2019-10-22T17:08:23+02:00" href="https://hackernoon.com/the-5-types-of-network-effects-and-how-to-hack-them-a5b54745eed2" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://hackernoon.com/the-5-types-of-network-effects-and-how-to-hack-them-a5b54745eed2</a>Abnormal grain growth of rutile TiO2 induced by ZrSiO4 - ScienceDirecthttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022024812005672dohan2019-10-10T14:15:23+02:00acicular grain growth prismatic rutile tio2 <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2019-10-10T14:15:23+02:00" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022024812005672" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022024812005672</a>Believe and You Can Achieve? Researchers Find Limited Gains From Growth Mindset Interventions | EdSurge Newshttps://www.edsurge.com/news/2018-05-29-believe-and-you-can-achieve-researchers-find-limited-gains-from-growth-mindset-interventionsyish2018-06-09T23:13:08+02:00growth mindset <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2018-06-09T23:13:08+02:00" href="https://www.edsurge.com/news/2018-05-29-believe-and-you-can-achieve-researchers-find-limited-gains-from-growth-mindset-interventions" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.edsurge.com/news/2018-05-29-believe-and-you-can-achieve-researchers-find-limited-gains-from-growth-mindset-interventions</a>[1803.04733] Gas, Dust, Stars, Star Formation and their Evolution in M33 at Giant Molecular Cloud Scaleshttps://arxiv.org/abs/1803.04733miki2018-03-14T11:26:31+01:00GMC growth properties <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2018-03-14T11:26:31+01:00" href="https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.04733" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.04733</a>Expansion of private higher educationPrivate universities have been expanding rapidly worldwide but particularly in developing countries, as rising demand for higher education has meant private providers plug a gap that publicly-financed institutions cannot fill fast enough, according to a new study.http://www.universityworldnews.com/article.php?story=20090707152445674prophe2018-02-03T23:16:08+01:00Jul2009 English private privatization developing expansion growth <span itemprop="description">Private universities have been expanding rapidly worldwide but particularly in developing countries, as rising demand for higher education has meant private providers plug a gap that publicly-financed institutions cannot fill fast enough, according to a new study.</span>For-Profit Colleges Look to Donald Trump for a Pass"Companies seek rollback of tough Obama-era regulations that threaten to lead to school closures" "Investors, in turn, have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into education stocks since the election, hopeful that a change of regime would spur a resurgence in the for-profit college sector"http://www.wsj.com/articles/for-profit-colleges-look-to-donald-trump-for-a-pass-1480680001prophe2018-02-03T23:15:35+01:00DeVry Strayer_Education Grand_Canyon_Education Donald_Trump For-profit growth Dec2016 _USA <span itemprop="description">"Companies seek rollback of tough Obama-era regulations that threaten to lead to school closures" "Investors, in turn, have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into education stocks since the election, hopeful that a change of regime would spur a resurgence in the for-profit college sector"</span>Why For-Profit Colleges Are Undaunted by the Trump University Casehttps://www.nasfaa.org/news-item/10606/Why_For-Profit_Colleges_Are_Undaunted_by_the_Trump_University_Caseprophe2018-02-03T23:15:34+01:00for-profit Donald_Trump growth USA Dec2016 _English <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2018-02-03T23:15:34+01:00" href="https://www.nasfaa.org/news-item/10606/Why_For-Profit_Colleges_Are_Undaunted_by_the_Trump_University_Case" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">https://www.nasfaa.org/news-item/10606/Why_For-Profit_Colleges_Are_Undaunted_by_the_Trump_University_Case</a>Graduate enrollment at for-profit colleges shows surprising growthhttp://www.standard.net/Business/2016/12/01/Graduate-enrollment-at-for-profit-colleges-shows-surprising-growth.htmlprophe2018-02-03T23:15:34+01:00Dec2016 for-profit growth USA English graduate_education <a itemprop="url" data-versiondate="2018-02-03T23:15:34+01:00" href="http://www.standard.net/Business/2016/12/01/Graduate-enrollment-at-for-profit-colleges-shows-surprising-growth.html" rel="nofollow" class="description-link">http://www.standard.net/Business/2016/12/01/Graduate-enrollment-at-for-profit-colleges-shows-surprising-growth.html</a>Christian universities are growing rapidly in AfricaChristian higher education is growing briskly in Sub-Saharan Africa. It exists at the intersection of two of the most dynamic social trends on the continent: the rapid rise of Christian adherence and the volatile growth of higher education. A century ago, only nine million Christians resided in all of Africa, and most were in Egypt’s and Ethiopia’s ancient churches. By 1950, this number had tripled, to about 30 million. By 1970, there were 114 million Christians in Africa. Today there are an estimated 555 million African Christians – Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant, Pentecostal and African-instituted. African higher education’s growth has also been rapid. In the early 1960s, there were only 41 higher education institutions and 16,500 students in all of Africa. As of 2010, Sub-Saharan Africa enrolled 5.2 million students in 668 higher education institutions, and these enrolments were more than double those in 2000. African universities today are emerging from a turbulent half-century. The immediate postcolonial era brought high hopes with supportive governments and massive international investments. But by the 1980s, African universities were suffering deep financial cuts as falling commodity prices and inflated energy prices crippled national budgets. World Bank and International Monetary Fund advisors pushed debtor nations to reallocate educational spending toward primary and secondary schools. Meanwhile, authoritarian regimes suspected flagship universities of subversion and slashed their budgets. By the 1990s, even the finest African universities were in crisis. To compound these problems, the growth of secondary education drove a relentless demand for tertiary enrolments. Governments mandated their flagship universities to enrol far beyond their carrying capacities. New regional institutions were founded and tertiary technical colleges were granted university status. Nigeria, for example, had founded 86 federal and state universities by 2015. Even with increases in funding, African higherhttp://www.universityworldnews.com/article.php?story=20170131142300487&query=privateprophe2018-02-03T23:15:33+01:00Feb2017 Africa Christian rise growth English <span itemprop="description">Christian higher education is growing briskly in Sub-Saharan Africa. It exists at the intersection of two of the most dynamic social trends on the continent: the rapid rise of Christian adherence and the volatile growth of higher education. A century ago, only nine million Christians resided in all of Africa, and most were in Egypt’s and Ethiopia’s ancient churches. By 1950, this number had tripled, to about 30 million. By 1970, there were 114 million Christians in Africa. Today there are an estimated 555 million African Christians – Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant, Pentecostal and African-instituted. African higher education’s growth has also been rapid. In the early 1960s, there were only 41 higher education institutions and 16,500 students in all of Africa. As of 2010, Sub-Saharan Africa enrolled 5.2 million students in 668 higher education institutions, and these enrolments were more than double those in 2000. African universities today are emerging from a turbulent half-century. The immediate postcolonial era brought high hopes with supportive governments and massive international investments. But by the 1980s, African universities were suffering deep financial cuts as falling commodity prices and inflated energy prices crippled national budgets. World Bank and International Monetary Fund advisors pushed debtor nations to reallocate educational spending toward primary and secondary schools. Meanwhile, authoritarian regimes suspected flagship universities of subversion and slashed their budgets. By the 1990s, even the finest African universities were in crisis. To compound these problems, the growth of secondary education drove a relentless demand for tertiary enrolments. Governments mandated their flagship universities to enrol far beyond their carrying capacities. New regional institutions were founded and tertiary technical colleges were granted university status. Nigeria, for example, had founded 86 federal and state universities by 2015. Even with increases in funding, African higher</span>Flourishing for-profit private schoolsDespite higher fee, these schools are a necessity till we develop alternatives Last week, we delved into whether the furore over school fee is justified. Taking it forward, in this second part, we look into whether private ‘for-profit’ schools are flourishing despite government and government-aided schools being affordable. How big is the private school sector? According to a report by Ernst & Young — ‘Private Sector’s Contribution to K-12 Education in India’, 25 per cent of all schools (Kindergarten to Class 12) in India are under private management. Their enrolment has crossed 40 per cent (urban and rural together) of the total enrolment. This number increases to 55 per cent when you look at only the secondary and higher secondary enrolment. The Annual Status of Education Report 2016 points out that this is not just an urban phenomenon. Enrolment in private schools (age 6 to 14) even in rural India is increasing — from 18.7 per cent in 2006 to 30.8 per cent in 2014. Every poor family spends a disproportionate amount of its earnings to send her child to a private school. Clearly, private schooling is big and is growing in both urban and rural India. Government Spend A study by Ambrish Dongre and Avani Kapur titled ‘India’s Spend on Elementary Education’ states that the government (Central and across 16 States) median spend on elementary education (Class 1 – 8) works out to Rs 11,225 per student enrolled in 2011-12. This looks quite low because it is the average across India and across all types of schools in rural and urban areas. A better benchmark is ‘government-spend’ in Kendriya Vidyalayas that provide the best quality among government schools. Elementary school education (Class 1 to 8) is free in KVs and is subsidised thereafter. The fee notified by the KV Sangathan is nil for these classes. From Class 9 to 12, a tuition fee of Rs 200-400 per month is claimed from boys. In addition, Rs 650 per month is taken for computers and Vidyalaya Vikas Nidhi, with exemptions for certain categories of students.http://telanganatoday.news/flourishing-for-profit-private-schoolsprophe2018-02-03T23:15:33+01:00for-profit Feb2017 growth India school <span itemprop="description">Despite higher fee, these schools are a necessity till we develop alternatives Last week, we delved into whether the furore over school fee is justified. Taking it forward, in this second part, we look into whether private ‘for-profit’ schools are flourishing despite government and government-aided schools being affordable. How big is the private school sector? According to a report by Ernst & Young — ‘Private Sector’s Contribution to K-12 Education in India’, 25 per cent of all schools (Kindergarten to Class 12) in India are under private management. Their enrolment has crossed 40 per cent (urban and rural together) of the total enrolment. This number increases to 55 per cent when you look at only the secondary and higher secondary enrolment. The Annual Status of Education Report 2016 points out that this is not just an urban phenomenon. Enrolment in private schools (age 6 to 14) even in rural India is increasing — from 18.7 per cent in 2006 to 30.8 per cent in 2014. Every poor family spends a disproportionate amount of its earnings to send her child to a private school. Clearly, private schooling is big and is growing in both urban and rural India. Government Spend A study by Ambrish Dongre and Avani Kapur titled ‘India’s Spend on Elementary Education’ states that the government (Central and across 16 States) median spend on elementary education (Class 1 – 8) works out to Rs 11,225 per student enrolled in 2011-12. This looks quite low because it is the average across India and across all types of schools in rural and urban areas. A better benchmark is ‘government-spend’ in Kendriya Vidyalayas that provide the best quality among government schools. Elementary school education (Class 1 to 8) is free in KVs and is subsidised thereafter. The fee notified by the KV Sangathan is nil for these classes. From Class 9 to 12, a tuition fee of Rs 200-400 per month is claimed from boys. In addition, Rs 650 per month is taken for computers and Vidyalaya Vikas Nidhi, with exemptions for certain categories of students.</span>A New Era of Cash and Optimism in For-Profit EducationEducational companies have seen their stock surge since the election. While the market as a whole has done well since Nov. 8, major companies including K12 Inc., Career Education Corp., DeVry Education Group Inc. and Capella Education Co. have grown faster than indexes. Laureate Education, Inc., which educates over one million post-secondary students in dozens of countries internationally, also concluded its (second) IPO in recent days. The company was publicly traded until 2007 when a group of investors took it private. Optimism and growth in the for-profit education market could mean changes to how the public thinks about higher education and career readiness. Many of the bigger higher education corporations tend to be more nimble in where they set up shop and more likely to build partnerships with business, said Guilbert Hentschke, a dean and professor emeritus at the USC Rossier School of Education. Many of the firms are focused on ensuring a local labor market is stocked with a stream of specifically accredited workers, compared to traditional non-profit four-year degree programs focused on the liberal arts. There are also signs of increasing collaboration between for-profit education companies and private non-profit institutions. Yesterday, Vanderbilt University joined with dozens of other schools in partnering with 2U Inc. to launch online degree offerings through its graduate school of education program. A big reason the for-profit education sector has seen renewed buoyancy in recent weeks is tied to the end of the Obama era. Hentschke, who is also affiliated with the Ernst & Young consultancy Parthenon-EY, said in an interview that the new administration and the new education secretary, Betsy DeVos, have not given a specific indication of their attitude toward for-profit education. Nevertheless, Trump’s business-oriented disposition and DeVos’s preference for free market fixes to the education system have not been lost on investors. The mere “absence of negative signals” represents a major shifhttp://www.insidesources.com/a-new-era-of-cash-and-optimism-in-for-profit-education/prophe2018-02-03T23:15:33+01:00for-profit USA Feb2017 English growth <span itemprop="description">Educational companies have seen their stock surge since the election. While the market as a whole has done well since Nov. 8, major companies including K12 Inc., Career Education Corp., DeVry Education Group Inc. and Capella Education Co. have grown faster than indexes. Laureate Education, Inc., which educates over one million post-secondary students in dozens of countries internationally, also concluded its (second) IPO in recent days. The company was publicly traded until 2007 when a group of investors took it private. Optimism and growth in the for-profit education market could mean changes to how the public thinks about higher education and career readiness. Many of the bigger higher education corporations tend to be more nimble in where they set up shop and more likely to build partnerships with business, said Guilbert Hentschke, a dean and professor emeritus at the USC Rossier School of Education. Many of the firms are focused on ensuring a local labor market is stocked with a stream of specifically accredited workers, compared to traditional non-profit four-year degree programs focused on the liberal arts. There are also signs of increasing collaboration between for-profit education companies and private non-profit institutions. Yesterday, Vanderbilt University joined with dozens of other schools in partnering with 2U Inc. to launch online degree offerings through its graduate school of education program. A big reason the for-profit education sector has seen renewed buoyancy in recent weeks is tied to the end of the Obama era. Hentschke, who is also affiliated with the Ernst & Young consultancy Parthenon-EY, said in an interview that the new administration and the new education secretary, Betsy DeVos, have not given a specific indication of their attitude toward for-profit education. Nevertheless, Trump’s business-oriented disposition and DeVos’s preference for free market fixes to the education system have not been lost on investors. The mere “absence of negative signals” represents a major shif</span>The first public benefit corporation is a for-profit college?Laureate Education just became the first IPO of a company that's legally allowed to sacrifice profit in exchange for purpose, though the for-profit education industry has had a hard time finding any purpose at all. On February 1, Douglas Becker made history when he rang the opening bell of the Nasdaq. His company, Laureate Education, Inc.—the world’s largest for-profit college network, with more than 1 million students enrolled at over 200 campuses in 28 countries—had just launched an initial public offering. IPO filings happen every day, but this is the first public benefit corporation to ever be publicly traded. Laureate is listed on the exchange as LAUR and raised $490 million by offering 35 million shares at a price of $14, slightly lower than expectations. Benefit corporations are distinct from a traditional corporation. Rather than a singular focus on creating financial value, a benefit corporation is explicitly mandated to pursue positive social and environmental impact alonghttps://www.fastcoexist.com/3068059/the-first-public-benefit-corporation-is-a-for-profit-collegeprophe2018-02-03T23:15:33+01:00for-profit growth Donald_Trump Feb2017 USA English <span itemprop="description">Laureate Education just became the first IPO of a company that's legally allowed to sacrifice profit in exchange for purpose, though the for-profit education industry has had a hard time finding any purpose at all. On February 1, Douglas Becker made history when he rang the opening bell of the Nasdaq. His company, Laureate Education, Inc.—the world’s largest for-profit college network, with more than 1 million students enrolled at over 200 campuses in 28 countries—had just launched an initial public offering. IPO filings happen every day, but this is the first public benefit corporation to ever be publicly traded. Laureate is listed on the exchange as LAUR and raised $490 million by offering 35 million shares at a price of $14, slightly lower than expectations. Benefit corporations are distinct from a traditional corporation. Rather than a singular focus on creating financial value, a benefit corporation is explicitly mandated to pursue positive social and environmental impact along</span>Trump’s Administration Is Making It Easier for For-Profit Colleges to Screw Over More StudentsRemember when candidate Trump promised to make college affordable for everyone? Yeah, that’s not happening. Instead, Trump is turning to the notorious corporateers who have been pouring McDiplomas on the nation’s steaming trillion-dollar student debt pyre to shake up higher education. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s controversial pick for a special assistant—for-profit college corporate lawyer Robert Eitel, may be a portent. As counsel for Bridgepoint, the parent company of the now-tainted brands of Ashford University and University of the Rockies, was forced by the Obama administration last year to refund $24 million in tuition and debt costs to students, plus civil damages, after the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found that its heavy marketing scheme for its online programs, and “deceived its students into taking out loans that cost more than advertised.” Bridgepoint is just one player in a sector of for-profit institutions that are known for exploiting millions in federal loans and grants, providing substandard academics and granting worthless diplomas. While many companies were reined in by regulators under Obama, the industry as a whole has survived, and is now poised for revival under Trump. In fact, even those companies penalized for defrauding students have not been held fully accountable over federal student debts; Bridgepoint’s sanction, for example, did not encompass federal loans, even though graduates are typically chained to about $33,000 in taxpayer-subsidized debt. But the for-profit college companies hobbled by financial crisis under Obama might see a major resurrection under Trump’s and DeVos’s deregulatory agenda. One tactic may be for belly-up for-profits to reinvent themselves as nonprofits, in order to skirt future regulations and wriggle out of liability for financial abuses. The Corinthian college chain, for example, following bankruptcy, was placed under the control of a nominal “nonprofit” called Zenith (which was later exposed for having compromising financial entanglehttps://www.thenation.com/article/trumps-administration-is-making-it-easier-for-for-profit-colleges-to-screw-over-more-students/prophe2018-02-03T23:15:33+01:00Donald_Trump USA Mar2017 for-profit rise growth <span itemprop="description">Remember when candidate Trump promised to make college affordable for everyone? Yeah, that’s not happening. Instead, Trump is turning to the notorious corporateers who have been pouring McDiplomas on the nation’s steaming trillion-dollar student debt pyre to shake up higher education. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s controversial pick for a special assistant—for-profit college corporate lawyer Robert Eitel, may be a portent. As counsel for Bridgepoint, the parent company of the now-tainted brands of Ashford University and University of the Rockies, was forced by the Obama administration last year to refund $24 million in tuition and debt costs to students, plus civil damages, after the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found that its heavy marketing scheme for its online programs, and “deceived its students into taking out loans that cost more than advertised.” Bridgepoint is just one player in a sector of for-profit institutions that are known for exploiting millions in federal loans and grants, providing substandard academics and granting worthless diplomas. While many companies were reined in by regulators under Obama, the industry as a whole has survived, and is now poised for revival under Trump. In fact, even those companies penalized for defrauding students have not been held fully accountable over federal student debts; Bridgepoint’s sanction, for example, did not encompass federal loans, even though graduates are typically chained to about $33,000 in taxpayer-subsidized debt. But the for-profit college companies hobbled by financial crisis under Obama might see a major resurrection under Trump’s and DeVos’s deregulatory agenda. One tactic may be for belly-up for-profits to reinvent themselves as nonprofits, in order to skirt future regulations and wriggle out of liability for financial abuses. The Corinthian college chain, for example, following bankruptcy, was placed under the control of a nominal “nonprofit” called Zenith (which was later exposed for having compromising financial entangle</span>‘Improving higher education standard key concern’Punjab Higher Education Minister Syed Raza Ali Gillani has said the role of private sector in promotion of education is equally important. It has been given conducive atmosphere to grow and extend learning opportunities to students. According to a handout, the minister was addressing an intermediate students’ science exhibition of a Gulberg-based private college here on Thursday. Raza Gillani commended the scientific understanding of the students, which they exhibited in the shape of models showing solution to different problems. In his address, he vowed that improving standard of higher education was the key concern of the government; and said that both public and private sectors could improve access to education of students. He reiterated that the Punjab government was committed to improve the standard of higher education, as it was the backbone of the economy, and produced best professionals for different fields. “We live in a knowledge-based society which is driven by information technology,” he added. Punjab Schools Education Minister Rana Mashhood Ahmed said revolutionary steps had been taken for improving the overall standard of schools education in the Punjab. “No child would be left outside schools as the government is fully committed to ensure hundred percent enrolment in schools by 2018,” he added. Both the ministers also inspected the science exhibition and lauded the students for their scientific intellect.https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/192759-Improving-higher-education-standard-key-concernprophe2018-02-03T23:15:32+01:00India Mar2017 growth rise English Lahore <span itemprop="description">Punjab Higher Education Minister Syed Raza Ali Gillani has said the role of private sector in promotion of education is equally important. It has been given conducive atmosphere to grow and extend learning opportunities to students. According to a handout, the minister was addressing an intermediate students’ science exhibition of a Gulberg-based private college here on Thursday. Raza Gillani commended the scientific understanding of the students, which they exhibited in the shape of models showing solution to different problems. In his address, he vowed that improving standard of higher education was the key concern of the government; and said that both public and private sectors could improve access to education of students. He reiterated that the Punjab government was committed to improve the standard of higher education, as it was the backbone of the economy, and produced best professionals for different fields. “We live in a knowledge-based society which is driven by information technology,” he added. Punjab Schools Education Minister Rana Mashhood Ahmed said revolutionary steps had been taken for improving the overall standard of schools education in the Punjab. “No child would be left outside schools as the government is fully committed to ensure hundred percent enrolment in schools by 2018,” he added. Both the ministers also inspected the science exhibition and lauded the students for their scientific intellect.</span>