Emily Sortor  |  May 26, 2020

Category: Education

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

A recent class action lawsuit claims that Grand Canyon University accreditation is fraudulent.

UPDATE:

  • A judge dismissed this case Dec. 19, 2019.

A Grand Canyon University student has filed a class action lawsuit alleging that the private, for-profit school deceptively markets the value and nature of its professional programs by misleading its students to think it has accreditation that it does not.

Additionally, the students argue that the university further misrepresents itself to students by taking out loans for students without their knowledge or consent.

The Grand Canyon University accreditation class action lawsuit was filed by Katie Ogdon who signed up for Grand Canyon University Master of Science in Psychology with an emphasis in Health Psychology program.

Ogdon says she did this because she was told that the program was a suitable way to reach her intended career.

However, she claims to have later discovered that the school did not have the appropriate accreditation to allow her to qualify for licensure as a mental health therapist in California, as she had intended.

Allegedly, the school uses “advisors” who market unaccredited professional programs to students. Ogdon states that these advisors recommend that students take classes that will not allow them to quality for licensure.

According to Ogdon, the school enrolls thousands of students per year in unaccredited programs. She notes that primarily, these students aim to pursue careers in the healthcare and educational fields.

The Grand Canyon University accreditation class action lawsuit states that Ogdon and many other students are financially injured by this practice, because they are effectively tricked into paying for education that is useless.

She states that no student would knowingly enroll in a professional degree program only to obtain a degree that is not accepted.

The plaintiff further stresses that this scheme prohibits students from transferring their coursework to an other institution — one with an accredited program — because an accredited program will not accept Grand Canyon University course credits.

The Grand Canyon University accreditation class action lawsuit states that GCU systematically puts profits ahead of its students best interest.

She notes that the school is a for-profit university, but argues that the school tricks students into thinking it is non-profit because of how GCE, Grand Canyon’s educational services business, was strategically distanced from the school.

The Grand Canyon University accreditation scam allegedly cheats students out of their tuition.The Grand Canyon University accreditation class action lawsuit contests that the school’s profitability relies on the low quality of the education provided which prevents the school from proving the accredited programs sought by many professionals.

Ogdon explains that the school hires low-quality professors and pays them a low wage, often on a part-time basis.

She asserts that the school spends only 15 percent of its revenue on faculty salaries, whereas most four-year accredited universities spend around 70 percent of revenue on faculty salaries.

The school is allegedly lacking in training and support for these underpaid professors and doles out substandard educational materials to students.

Allegedly, these elements make the program profitable for the school, but prevent it from meeting the standards necessary for accreditation.

The Grand Canyon University tuition class action lawsuit then goes on to say that the school intentionally keeps students in the dark about the nature of their education in other ways. The also school perpetuates this scheme through information misleadingly presented by the school “advisors.”

Additionally, Ogden says that the school is mostly funded by the tuition of students gained through student loan programs.

She argues that this means that the federal government is “wasting hundreds of millions of dollars each year of unaccredited degree programs which do not advance students or their professional careers.”

Ogdon notes that many students at Grand Canyon are online students, explaining that the school gains a significant portion of its revenue from these students.

School representatives are reportedly told to recruit students by glossing over the school’s method for procuring student loans to pay for a Grand Canyon University tuition. Specifically, Ogden says that the representatives do not explain that the school takes out loans on their behalf, nor do they tell them the amount of the loans.

Allegedly, the school relies on the fact that that most student loan payments are not due until after a student has graduated, so many students at Grand Canyon University complete their studies before they realize that they are in thousands of dollars in debt without their previous knowledge.

These allegations are not the first launched against Grand Canyon University over misleading marketing tactics.

If you pursued higher education, how did you choose your educational institution? Share your experiences in the comments below.

Ogdon is represented by Annick Persinger, Hassan A. Zavareei, and Kristen G. Simplicio of Tycko & Zavareei LLP.

The Grand Canyon University Accreditation Class Action Lawsuit is Katie Ogdon v. Grand Canyon University Inc., et al., Case No. 1:20-at-00363, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.


61 thoughts onGrand Canyon University Class Action Alleges Accreditation Scam

  1. Mary says:

    I have a Masters degree in Nursing that is useless and my debt is more than the loan on my house. I’m two years away from retirement but won’t be d as ble to because of the student debt I owe.

    1. Matthew says:

      Mary

      Can you tell me more about this, my wife is enrolled there now for same program

      Masters in Nursing

  2. Sven says:

    I am member of a facebook group of studens called Grand Canyon University Scam! I was taken to the cleaner by this school….. but I am clearly not the only person whose had problems with them. Christian University, HA….. right!?

  3. Robert Voorhees says:

    I also spent tens of thousands of dollars at GCU then they added more classes, constantly changed stories about graduation, and lied about scholarships, . I had to retain a lawyer to get them to release my degree after holding it for two years. Soulless institution that hides behind “Christianity”. Beware!!!

  4. Jean says:

    I am a doctoral GCU student also being soaked for money from the owners of gcu. They have created the ultimate stall tactics by adding unexpected rules and assignments that delay the paper/dissertation process with subjective grading lead by the members of the doctoral committee! These people are not interested in student success, only money.

    1. Sheldon Craven says:

      I believe you. I was student their for several years kept making me redo my doctoral paper and taking more classes until my loans ran out. I didn’t even look for them in the beginning they found me and I also wanted to contribute when I was introduced to the program but was used for the funding they can get from me.

  5. Anna D says:

    I’m a student at GCU in an advertised “accredited” program and am trying to transfer out. I’m currently finding out that my classes aren’t accredited and it pushed my graduation date back. They have a lot of false advertising especially on campus.

  6. CHERYL LYNN PENDER says:

    I would be interested to know what there’s any other lawsuits involving Grand Canyon University

  7. Charles Henry says:

    I’d love to hear the result of schools that are closing football to COVID and not sure how they are going to make ends meet! GCU is strong; as far as I’ve seen and heard. I am a GCU parent; and I have no qualms about my progeny representing GCU once in the workforce! (I also have worked in higher education for 11+ years); always for accredited school and experienced many facets of the accreditation process!).

  8. Val Vetack says:

    This is ridiculous you have to do your own research and be knowledgeable for what works in your state. I live in California so I didn’t do certain programs because they weren’t applicable. Online learning is for those who make it work for themselves and I have had some pretty tough Professors! Working on my MHA now my loans were 1/2 of everything cost of other universities.

  9. Heather M Armstrong says:

    I was a student in 2009 I am now over my head in loans with no degree.

    1. Taronica Wimbush says:

      I went through this recently. Another site shares our stories that all sound the same. I was told several different things. I have emails and correspondences as well. Why isn’t the Dept of Ed doing anything?

    2. Jean says:

      I am a doctoral GCU student also being soaked for money from the owners of gcu. They have created the ultimate stall tactics by adding unexpected rules and assignments that delay the paper/dissertation process with subjective grading lead by the members of the doctoral committee! These people are not interested in student success, only money.

  10. Destiny Knapp-Nance says:

    I am a student of GCU as well. I have encountered this twice and I am now over my head in loans with 3 useless degrees.

1 2 3 5

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.