Saturday, November 13, 2010

Kaplan University Login

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I really don't know anything about Kaplan University Login. What happened with Kaplan University Login? Do you have any problem with Kaplan University Login? Contact to the website admin or look on google.
Here are some of the lawsuits:
Kaplan University recruiters would use any means to enroll students, a federal lawsuit filed in Miami by three former employees alleges.
Kaplan, owned by the Washington Post Co., has a large presence in South Florida, including call centers in Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton.
The suit alleges recruiters could earn as much as $100,000 a year if they enrolled enough students, but if their performance dropped, they faced major pay cuts and would get fired or feel pressured to quit.
"It is not unusual for the paramedics to be called to the boilerplate call centers that Kaplan runs in Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton," the lawsuit alleges.
Recruiters would tell "at-risk students" they could use their government loans for anything they wished after they paid tuition, the suit alleges. Students would then buy a car and never attend class, according to the complaint.
Kaplan stopped tying admissions officers' pay to enrollment shortly after an Aug. 4 federal Government Accountability Report found recruiters making misrepresentations at the Pembroke Pines and Riverside, Calif., campuses of Kaplan College, owned by the same company as Kaplan University.
The suit alleges professors were forced to inflate student grades or risk losing their jobs.
The plaintiffs in the suit are Jude Gillespie, a former course developer and associate professor; Carlos Urquilla-Diaz, a former high-level employee and professor; and Ben Wilcox, a former dean.
Kaplan spokesman Ron Iori called the allegations baseless.
"These former employees-turned-plaintiffs have made outlandish claims against Kaplan in numerous forums over the last several years, and they all have been repeatedly rejected," he said.
Iori said Wilcox hacked into company computers and will stand trial this month on U.S. Justice Department cybercrime charges.
Six students say MedVance Institute promised them recession-proof jobs in the health care industry, but left them unemployed and in heavy debt.


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