Tag: Eastern

  • Audit slams shuttered Eastern Gateway Community College for ‘derelict accounting’

    Audit slams shuttered Eastern Gateway Community College for ‘derelict accounting’

    Dive Brief:

    • Ohio’s state auditor last week alleged derelict accounting and controls and “rampant financial mismanagement of public resources” at Eastern Gateway Community College during the now-shuttered institution’s final years.
    • The report from auditor Keith Faber’s office flagged $17.3 million of Eastern Gateway’s spending — the total amount of its federal student aid dollars in fiscal 2023 — as being insufficiently accounted for, due to “pervasive deficiencies in recordkeeping.”
    • The office additionally detailed dozens of instances of inadequate data, unjustified spending, poor student recordkeeping, and lack of existing or approved written spending policies, among other issues.

    Dive Insight:

    Faber issued a blunt summary of the troubled Eastern Gateway’s financial leadership during the period covered by the report, from July 2022 to June 2023. 

    This goes beyond sloppiness and honest mistakes,” Faber said in a statement. “The public should be outraged.”

    When investigating the public college’s books, state auditors were “unable to obtain audit evidence supporting the College’s compliance with applicable federal requirements for these programs,” according to the report. In other words, Eastern Gateway’s recordkeeping deficiencies may have violated federal law tied to Title IV, in the auditors’ view.

    Eastern Gateway indeed came under scrutiny over federal compliance, which ultimately hastened its demise. 

    In 2022, the U.S. Department of Education alleged the institution’s free college initiative illegally charged students with Pell Grants more than those without. The department told Eastern Gateway to stop offering the free college program and implemented other regulatory restrictions, at which point the institution sued the agency. However, Eastern Gateway eventually did end the program as part of a settlement with the feds. 

    The reputational damage and subsequent student decline after ending its free college program took a heavy toll on Eastern Gateway. In February 2024, the community college announced it would suspend enrollment for all students after its spring semester. By May, the institution announced it would permanently close in the fall

    But despite being shuttered for more than a year, Eastern Gateway continues to make headlines. The state auditor’s new report details issues across nearly all of the college’s operations. 

    Some were as small as missing signatures in vendor contracts and lack of a detailed policy for use of an institutional Amazon account. But some findings represented potentially massive oversights, such as issuing $13.6 million in bonds to buy a parking garage that cost more to demolish than the land underneath was worth. 

    More reports and details could yet emerge. Faber’s office noted in the Nov. 25 release that its Special Investigations Unit has an ongoing probe into Eastern Gateway’s operations that could produce future reports on the institution. The unit, together with several state law enforcement agencies, executed a search warrant in January 2024 related to the investigation.

    Meanwhile, nearby Youngstown State University — with which Eastern Gateway established a teach-out plan — plans to absorb what remains of the smaller institution. The university’s board last month approved a plan to acquire property belonging to the community college. Youngstown State officials have said it’s the first time a community college has operated under a four-year university in Ohio.

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  • Eastern Michigan University to cut ties with Chinese colleges amid lawmaker push

    Eastern Michigan University to cut ties with Chinese colleges amid lawmaker push

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    Dive Brief: 

    • Eastern Michigan University is ending engineering teaching partnerships with two Chinese universities after a pair of prominent Republican lawmakers raised national security concerns. 
    • The university announced Wednesday it is terminating its partnership with Guangxi University and Beibu Gulf University. Eastern Michigan President James Smith said the university is working with Beibu Gulf to ensure affected students can complete their studies elsewhere. The Guangxi partnership did not enroll any students.
    • The move comes as Republican lawmakers increasingly raise research theft concerns about colleges’ partnerships with Chinese universities. The Trump administration is also moving to “aggressively revoke” the visas of international students from China, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said this week. 

    Dive Insight: 

    In February, two high-profile lawmakers from Michigan Rep. Tim Walberg, the chair of the House’s education committee, and Rep. John Moolenaar, the chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Partycalled on Eastern Michigan and two other universities in their state to end their partnerships with Chinese colleges. 

    “The university’s [People’s Republic of China] collaborations jeopardize the integrity of U.S. research, risk the exploitation of sensitive technologies, and undermine taxpayer investments intended to strengthen America’s technological and defense capabilities,” the letter stated

    Shortly afterward, Oakland University said it would end its partnerships with three Chinese universities. The University of Detroit Mercy, the third institution that received a letter in February, is likewise ending its teaching partnerships with Chinese universities. 

    University of Detroit Mercy President Donald Taylor said in a Friday statement that the institution is working to ensure students can finish their studies. He also noted that the partnerships have not included any research or technology transfer. 

    “They are solely for undergraduate teaching programs only with course content that is available publicly,” Taylor said.

    In Eastern Michigan’s Wednesday announcement, Smith stressed that both partnerships had been exclusively focused on teaching and did not involve research or the transfer of technology. He added that the programs did not encompass cybersecurity teaching. 

    “The course content for all offered classes is widely available in the public domain,” Smith said. 

    In October, Moolenaar also urged the University of Michigan to end its two-decade partnership with Shanghai Jiao Tong University on a joint institute. Moolenaar alleged the partnership had helped the Chinese government advance their defense technologies, from rocket fuel research to improving imaging to detect flaws in military equipment. 

    The University of Michigan announced in January it would end academic collaboration with Shanghai Jiao Tong and ensure students enrolled in the joint institute’s programs would be able to complete their degrees. 

    Last year, the Georgia Institute of Technology also announced it would pull out of a partnership that established an overseas campus in China, while the University of California, Berkeley recently severed ties with Tsinghua University following a House report raising concerns with colleges’ partnerships with Chinese institutions. 

    The Trump administration recently opened an investigation into UC Berkeley over its partnership with Tsinghua University, alleging that it failed to properly report its foreign gifts and contracts. 

    Earlier this month, two House committees set their sights on Harvard University’s ties with China, arguing that some of its partnerships “raise serious national security and ethnical concerns.” Lawmakers demanded the Ivy League institution hand over internal documents related to its partnerships with China and certain other countries by June 2. 

    The Trump administration is also planning a crackdown on international students from China, citing national security concerns. Rubio said Wednesday that the federal government will revoke visas from Chinese students “with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields,” though he didn’t specify what those disciplines would be.

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  • Harrow International announces first Middle Eastern school 

    Harrow International announces first Middle Eastern school 

    The UK’s 450-year-old Harrow boarding school has unveiled plans for its first international school in the Middle East, opening a campus on Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi.

    “The opening of Harrow International School in the UAE is a testament to the strong educational ties between the UK and the UAE and our shared aspiration for academic excellence,” said Edward Hobart, British Ambassador to the UAE.  

    The flagship school will be operated by UAE education provider, Taaleem, which last year acquired the rights to operate Harrow’s international schools across the Gulf Cooperation Council countries.  

    The launch of Harrow’s first international school in the region marks Taaleem’s strategic expansion into the “super-premium” education sector, said the organisation’s chairman Khalid Al Tayer. 

    Boarding at Harrow’s UK school costs upwards of £20,000 per term, though tuition fees have not been released for the new Abu Dhabi location.  

    The opening of Harrow International School in the UAE is a testament to the strong educational ties between the UK and the UAE

    Edward Hobart, British Ambassador

    One of the region’s largest K-12 providers with over 30 schools across the UAE, Taaleem will independently own and operate the running of the school.  

    The Abu Dhabi location will initially cater to students from early years to year six, with gradual expansion through the higher years and a total capacity of 1,800 students.  

    “Class sizes will be optimised to ensure personalised attention, with a focus on academic rigour and holistic development,” the school group stated. 

    It is expected to soon announce an additional Harrow school in Dubai, subject to government approval

    Harrow school said that the “landmark agreement” would bring Harrow’s “rich heritage and values-driven education to the UAE capital”.  

    “Rooted in tradition yet designed for the future, Harrow Abu Dhabi will offer an exceptional learning environment that nurtures character, leadership, and a global outlook,” it added. 

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