International News

Chile: Apollo Group suffers setback

Chile’s only university owned by the global arm of US for-profit education giant Apollo Group has had its accreditation withdrawn.

On July 18, following an unsuccessful appeal, Chile’s National Education Council confirmed a decision of the National Accreditation Commission to stop accrediting the University for Arts, Sciences and Communication (UNIACC). Consequently the university’s students will be ineligible for the Chilean government’s state-backed student loan system, which allows borrowing at below-market interest rates.

In its judgement, the council said UNIACC’s goals and planning lacked clarity, and it criticised internal quality assurance mechanisms. It also expressed uncertainty over the institution’s long-term sustainability and concern that its large projections of growth in e-learning would not guarantee adequate levels of quality.

Juan Enrique Froemel, rector of the university, says the situation has “no implication for the validity of certificates and degrees awarded by the university, nor for the continuity of the institution”. He described the decision “unjustified and inexplicable” and said the university could count on the unconditional support of its backers.

The cost and quality of for-profit universities were among the targets of the student movement whose protests last year brought much of the country’s capital, Santiago, to a halt. But the loss of accreditation is only one of several recent problems for UNIACC.

In 2008 it was accused by the government of profiting from a fellowship programme for victims, and descendants of victims, of human rights violations during Chile’s military dictatorship. In an out-of-court settlement in 2009, the university agreed to repay $4.8 million (Rs.25.9 crore) to the ministry of education, which further exacerbated the financial difficulties, which eventually led to more than 100 job losses in May this year.

Along with the UK’s BPP University College, UNIACC is one of three institutions outside the US owned by Apollo Global, a majority-owned subsidiary of Apollo Group. Apollo Global purchased the Santiago-based institution in 2008.

(Excerpted and adapted from Times Higher Education)