The Atlantic

The Lifelong Cost of Getting a For-Profit Education

A new report shows how these institutions hound people to enroll, and then leave them with little besides a pile of loans they often can’t pay back.
Source: Sam Edwards / Getty

For many students, the path toward enrolling in a for-profit college starts with an advertisement—maybe while browsing online or watching a favorite television show. Either way, the message is usually the same: Get off the couch and do something with your life.

The ads feature compelling and relatable stories: A young—or perhaps middle-aged—African-American stuck in a dead-end job and looking for change. A single mother trying to provide a better life for her children. A military veteran contemplating next steps after returning home. When prospective students stumble upon ads that catch their eye, they might make a

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