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Sherman A1

(38,958 posts)
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:21 PM Jun 2013

Vatterott College told to pay woman $13 million

KANSAS CITY • A woman who sued Vatterott College over its enrollment practices has won a $13 million judgment against the college.

Jennifer Kerr, 42, of Belton, Mo., said the enrollment procedures caused her to spend thousands of dollars and extra time earning a certificate that proved to be useless in the job market.

A finding by a Jackson County jury for Kerr is likely to be appealed and the punitive amount the jury awarded far exceeds the maximum allowed under Missouri law, The Kansas City Star reported.

In her lawsuit, Kerr said she went to the school in 2009 with plans to become a nurse. Vatterott doesn’t offer a nursing program, but a representative told her she could enroll in a medical assistant’s degree, which would help her eventually become a nurse, according to the lawsuit.

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/education/vatterott-college-told-to-pay-woman-million/article_bb1677a4-d703-512c-ac5f-f469354b94b1.html

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Vatterott College told to pay woman $13 million (Original Post) Sherman A1 Jun 2013 OP
The award will be reduced on appeal Warpy Jun 2013 #1
She will probably end up with her education paid and that is all. liberal N proud Jun 2013 #6
Great advising at the college. Buzz Clik Jun 2013 #2
as an academic advisor I agree, with the caveat that students have the primary responsibility... mike_c Jun 2013 #3
The bad advising would be an excuse for maybe two years. Buzz Clik Jun 2013 #4
Proprietary schools use these misleading tactics. Manifestor_of_Light Jun 2013 #5

Warpy

(113,130 posts)
1. The award will be reduced on appeal
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:25 PM
Jun 2013

because that's how the system works. She will still win since very little of a medical assistant's program can be transferred and used as nursing school credits.

Maybe it will even net her enough to get through nursing school.

liberal N proud

(60,930 posts)
6. She will probably end up with her education paid and that is all.
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 02:02 PM
Jun 2013

IF she gets that.

The corporate lawyers will either get Vatterott off or eat up the winnings.

 

Buzz Clik

(38,437 posts)
2. Great advising at the college.
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:29 PM
Jun 2013

This is the problem that arises when advisers do not put the welfare and interests of the student ahead of the need to recruit warm bodies into programs.

mike_c

(36,329 posts)
3. as an academic advisor I agree, with the caveat that students have the primary responsibility...
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:39 PM
Jun 2013

...for making responsible and informed decisions about their degree programs. We call it "adult education" for a reason.

Someone in admissions clearly gave this young woman some bad advice. I'm not sure how I feel about $13 million judgements for accepting and acting upon bad advice, however. A quick call to some nursing programs-- or simply looking at their catalogs-- would have revealed that the medical assistant program does not cover many of the requirements for a nursing degree. It's public information, easily obtainable by anyone who inquires.

 

Buzz Clik

(38,437 posts)
4. The bad advising would be an excuse for maybe two years.
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:41 PM
Jun 2013

By the time she started looking into nursing programs, the light should have gone on.

 

Manifestor_of_Light

(21,046 posts)
5. Proprietary schools use these misleading tactics.
Thu Jun 20, 2013, 01:59 PM
Jun 2013

The Art Institutes do this. They imply that you will be able to get a job when you graduate and that by going to that school, you will have connections.

The Houston school was sued by about 200 former students because of this BS. The plaintiffs settled for a few hundred dollars. Nobody got anywhere near their original tuition money back. As far as the video production business, the job market was not open. People with advanced physics/electrical engineering degrees were not hired, in favor of non-college graduates with an 18 month certificate that would not transfer to a four year college, because they were "young" and "hip". They knew nothing about proper recording.

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