
University of Phoenix Reviews
- We require contact information to ensure our reviewers are real.
- Our moderators read all reviews to verify quality and helpfulness.
- We use intelligent software that helps us maintain the integrity of reviews.
+2 more
About University of Phoenix
The University of Phoenix is an online university focused on education for working adults. It offers over 100 career-relevant programs and flexible, asynchronous classes. Students take one course at a time, with each lasting about six weeks. One-on-one support is available 14 hours per day, five days a week.
- Designed for busy schedules
- Online, asynchronous classes
- Professors with real-world experience
- Scholarships available
- Tuition locked at enrollment
- Only one in-person campus
- Lacks strong networking opportunities
University of Phoenix Reviews
Filter by Rating
- (361)
- (90)
- (81)
- (101)
- (731)
Popular Mentions
- 4,880,395 reviews on ConsumerAffairs are verified.
- We require contact information to ensure our reviewers are real.
- We use intelligent software that helps us maintain the integrity of reviews.
- Our moderators read all reviews to verify quality and helpfulness.
Top reviews
- Top reviews
- Recent
- Oldest
- Most helpful
A link has directed you to this review. Its location on this page may change next time you visit.
- 4,880,395 reviews on ConsumerAffairs are verified.
- We require contact information to ensure our reviewers are real.
- We use intelligent software that helps us maintain the integrity of reviews.
- Our moderators read all reviews to verify quality and helpfulness.
Reviewed Jan. 13, 2012
I was 19 when I did my University of Phoenix online classes. Not only did they not tell me credits were nontransferable to other schools, but the person assigned to advise me told me to spend the checks I received for financial aid on shopping trips or "rainy days" as she put it. In fact, she never told me how much the classes were, she just said that financial aid would take care of it and implied that I wouldn't have to pay out of pocket. As if I had received grant money instead of a ton of student loan debt. Now I'm 22 and can't afford or qualify for financial aid to go to a real school.
I can't even get a job at McDonalds (I’ve tried) because the job market where I live is terrible right now. I don't know how I am going to pay my massive student loans after my deferment is over in March. Not to mention, I didn't even finish their so called degree program because by then I realized how much money I had lost and how much crap I was in because of them.
Reviewed Jan. 12, 2012
I enrolled there twice trying to get a degree in business. When I went back, they promised me that it was much different, that the instructors would work with me when I explained to them that I was out of town a lot with a sick granddaughter (whom I was raising at the time). They promised me that it would be okay to come on back and not worry about the deadlines as long as I had them in within the week.
That did not happen; as I was turning in late assignment that was losing points due to being late, I could not keep up and it was too late to drop. I would not recommend this university to anyone, not to mention all my classes were with Axia and not UOP. I have student loans that I cannot afford to pay and now a collection agency is taking legal action because I somehow owe UOP $910.80. Funny thing was I joined UOP and was taking classes at Axia. So I wonder why UOP is suing me for money?
Reviewed Jan. 10, 2012
I've been attending UoP since January 2011. At first, everything went as it was supposed to. Then I hit a wall and was homeless, living in a shelter with my two daughters. With the stress of trying to find housing, employment, and maintain my schoolwork, I made it through my second block of courses. Then I completed my 3rd block of courses with a breeze. I received my first two disbursements as promised. Now I was in my fourth block of classes, and was having trouble with paying to keep my internet service on, which resulted in me struggling to keep up with my attendance requirements. The dominoes started falling when I was dropped from my PSY/201 class.
At first, my financial aid and academic counselor were telling me that since I was dropped with a passing grade, all I had to do was pass my other class, which was HUM/111, and there would be no discrepancies with my financial aid. Also, I had to repay for the remaining weeks I did not complete, which totaled up to me paying a little over $600. My grade in HUM/111 course was already below satisfactory due to this instructor saying he could not open my assignments. I would resubmit them to only receive an answer of "try better next time, we must move on.” That was frustrating within itself. So, I made a conscious effort to go to public computer labs so I could ensure my last assignments were in on time and in the right format. I did week 8 and 9 on the same computer and submitted both assignments. He was able to read week 8, but two weeks of waiting for my last assignment to be graded, I seen that he "was not able to open my last assignment" and I received a failing grade.
The problem was my assignments were in a compressed file and when you tried to open it a screen would pop up and ask what program to open the document with. I could not resubmit the assignment and my academic counselor told me the instructors have the choice of opening our assignments and are not held liable if they are not computer savvy enough to figure out how to open the document. First of all, when I first signed up for online courses, I was tested on how computer literate I was, had to ensure I had the right computer programs to submit and view my assignments, etc. Why are the instructors not held to the same standard? But that is not all! I subsequently failed and was dropped from my other course with a passing standard.
Emotionally distraught, I called to see what options I had. Suddenly, they were able to waive the charges for me to retake PSY/201, which was not an option for me when I was dropped. They wanted me to pay the money upfront. But I was told that after I passed this course, I would be able to proceed with the other classes I was supposed to be in and work on repaying for HUM/111. Now I am here and just got off the phone with my FA counselor, and he says I will not receive a disbursement nor will I be able to proceed with my courses until I paid for and passed the course I failed! This makes no sense because I was notified that I had to complete 75% of my credits to continue with the help I receive to pay for my education. Yet he is telling me that 100% of my credits must be completed in order to receive the rest of my assistance. This school is full of **, and I want to seek legal options on this matter so I can go to a real school and receive my proper education.
Reviewed Jan. 9, 2012
I had a bad experience at a previous school and I was told UOP was good and so I called them. I have a learning disability and made it very clear in the beginning. They assured me I would be tested before I started to see where I was at. It never happened. I got thrown straight into mainstream classes. Not doing well, I am sinking slowly, my computer got stolen and the used one I bought crashed. I only got 1 week of work in of the two I owed. But because I turned it all in one day, I didn't make attendance and the class dropped. I have lost all hope in trying to better my education and disappointed with all the lies I was told to get me in the door. Now, I can't do anything about it, and am getting no help, just lining their pockets with my grant and loan money.
Reviewed Jan. 8, 2012
Well, I just want to say that I have just graduated with my associates degree from Phoenix and I had no problems at all. I always received my disbursements, not always on time, but I received them. After reading these posts, I don't know if I want to continue with my bachelors degree. I have already started with my paper work, haven't spoken with my financial aid advisor yet concerning my funds, but I hope everything runs smooth like the first 2 years.
The problem I have with this college is that first of all, they have no intern programs. In this economy, you need to have intern programs to gain experience. Well I know in Georgia you need experience to work on their jobs. And I haven't gotten a job yet because they want a bachelors degree versus associates. But other than this, the college did me good.
Reviewed Jan. 7, 2012
I have been a student in a masters (professional) program at the university. I have completed 3/4 of the master's degree; the entire academic portion I should be entering into the internship portion.
A couple of months ago, I had a professor who decided she did not like me. She made up a lot of false information and accusations, then sent these accusations to the administration and they try to have me expelled. Her accusations are subjective in nature and completely inaccurate. The administration told me that I needed to go to a meeting that they said must take place two and a half weeks ago and asked for my number which I provided. I also asked what my rights were and that they provide me with the policies regarding the meeting (they have policies) but they did not provide me with them. They did not have the meeting the week and they demanded that I must attend but instead finally sent me a message today, after two and a half weeks later, saying that they have concluded their exploration into my violations of policies and that they need to meet with me for an hour in a couple of weeks from now.
Obviously, the only thing they explored were her accusations. She has made many, many false accusations. Her accusations state things such as I am ostracized by my class because of my behavior. This is a total lie and obviously they did not consult with my class members to see if these accusations were true. I get along with my school group just fine. I have been with this group for eight months. Unfortunately, this teacher is also friends with the administration. I am pretty sure that I could sue the university for a large sum of money for breach of contract or something else if I could only afford an attorney.
The first eight months of my program seemed of value; however, for the past twenty months, the quality of this education has been very, very low. No one has even read their books in over a year. We have plenty of work to do but it is only busy work. Master's program is so low in quality that the student don't even use the required text for a single course in over a year. It is my opinion that if you are considering attending the university, you instead run the other direction.
If it is ever in my power to find a way to take away their billions in federal funding each year, I will do it and run them into the ground. Out of all the people I started the program with, only 50% or less are still in the program; the rest were either kicked out or dropped out. The program costs over $500 per credit hour. Think how many thousands all of those people threw away before they were tossed out by the school! Furthermore, multiple teachers have provided information that in this field, only 33% of the people who graduate are working in the field ten years later. Do some calculations, that means 1/6 of the people who start this program actually end up working in the field in a program that takes three and a half years to complete at a tuition cost of over $33,000. I don't want to say that all of the teachers are bad; they are not and many are very good. I believe it is the school itself that is critically flawed and needs to be shut down.
If you do serious research, you will find more federal funding goes to this university than any other to the tune of billions each year. You will also find that they have among the worst retention and graduation rates in the nation. You will also find that they have among the highest student loan default rates in the nation. I am not making this up. This information is available on Federal Government websites.
Reviewed Jan. 5, 2012
In June 2011 I submitted my paperwork for the 2011-2012 school year for financial aid. I was told I was eligible for $5500 in Pell grant money and also for loans. After about a month I finally got a hold of my FA advisor, and he tells me that the Department of Education has required a verification and that I need to submit tax forms and W-2s for 2010. I submit my tax forms, hubby's w-2, and my 1099 from the state for unemployment. I then don't hear anything more for another month. I call the FA advisor again, and he says, "Oh, they need another form sent in." I send it. Then in November I'm told that I need to send in my W-2 transcript from the IRS. I didn't have a W-2 in 2010! I was unemployed! So, after waiting 45 days from something from the IRS, I send this paper into them. We are now looking at the beginning of December.
So I wait a month, knowing that the holidays are around. So today I email my FA counselor, only to get a reply that he's no longer there and to contact someone else! In the meantime, I check my online account and I'm showing that there is a discrepancy of $7800 from what my student loan servicers says that was paid to UofP compared to what UofP said they received, including $2500 that was disbursed to UofP in November but hasn't shown up in my account. So after finding out that my FA counselor is no longer there, I called his covering FA counselor and she says the hold up is simply a form that needed to be signed and my original FA counselor was notified of this way back in August! For God's sake! Where’s the missing disbursement? Are they embezzling? Sallie Mae suggested getting a hold of the Department of Education and having them start an investigation. If anyone is interested, the number is **. I've had to go on a leave of absence because my financial aid has not gone through.
Reviewed Jan. 3, 2012
I've been working hard for my degree for some time. UoP offers the convenience of online courses and facilitated admissions and logistics processes. The business approach that they take is good up to a point. However, over the course of the last few months, university representatives in a variety of roles have frustrated and almost completely obstructed me furthering my education. An instructor is accusing me of plagiarizing my final paper. This is completely false. I cited and referenced everything, yet she had "academic issues" and I was charged with plagiarizing. I filed an appeal and it came back as being withheld, so this means that I need to re-take the class in addition to having this in my permanent record.
After all these years of hard work, I feel that I am being discriminated against because of my race, trying to hold me back. Why would someone wait till their last class to copy another paper? To make matters worse, they convict you without talking to you or any proof. They stand by their instructors whether they are wrong or right. I have had many other problems before, but this one is the worst and unethical.
Reviewed Jan. 3, 2012
This school for the past few years has been nothing but a joke. Thousands of dollars gone for nothing. The advisors don't care about their students at all. I have been trying to work out a grade issue with them now and have a valid excuse and have gotten no where. All the people in here who have their financial aid held. Go to the financial aid website for UOP and turn in the form to manage your own funds. They have 14 days to get it to you. I hope this helps.
Reviewed Jan. 3, 2012
In June 2011, I was enrolled in a class with UOP. I dropped the course, completed and submitted a drop credit request for the course within the 60 day window allotted. I only attended this course online for 2 weeks. UOP was paid for the class by the VA. I did not receive anything because at the time, BAH was not being offered for online classes. A few weeks after dropping the course, I started to receive letters from the VA stating that I had to pay for the dropped class. When I called the VA, they told me that the school had been paid for the class but had not refunded the money back to the VA. I then called UOP VA Benefits Office and was told they had to look into it.
I ended up calling the UOP VA Benefit Office again, some time later and was told that the money for the class was returned to the VA, but the money for my class was combined with money of a few hundred other students. A few months later, August or September, the money for the dropped class was finally applied to my VA account. Why did it take from June until August-September to send money for a dropped class back to the VA? From June until then, I was still receiving letters saying I had to pay for the class. I was also told if I didn't pay for the class by October (When BAH benefits started for online courses), or went to school on campus, that my BAH would be withheld.
The finance counselor, after I told her it was ** and I wanted to withdraw from UOP, told me that if I wanted to attend another school that my transcripts would not be released until I paid for the class and I had to take one more class with UOP. UOP is still calling me to this day, pay a processing fee of 100 dollars for this dropped class from June. Now, it's January 2, 2012. I'm currently in the class that I dropped in June. In the 3rd week of class, I call UOP VA Benefit Office to inquire why I had not been paid my BAH. They said to call back in a week, that my certification for enrollment had not been sent to them yet. A week later, I called back and was told that since I dropped the class in June and I'm taking it now, they had to update some stuff and they would look at my stuff and see what's going on.
I have been on Christmas break for a week, and week 5 started today so my class started 6 weeks ago, and no certification for enrollment, no BAH still. I also had an issue after my last class in Nov, 2011. I'm in a Bachelors program, but they did not schedule me any classes. It was 2 days before my last class ended and I was not scheduled for any classes. When I called UOP, they told me that I had to wait an extra week because it was to late to start in a class. I started UOP in July 2010, and they have always scheduled my classes. I think this school takes people's money, and that's it.
Reviewed Jan. 2, 2012
Just found out that my classes were all dropped because I'm going through a really bad crisis in my life (apartment fire). I called UOP before the holidays to let them know what happened. One FA counselor stated that all I needed to do was post for the rest of the week and continue when school starts back on January 2, 2012.
So, today I went in to do my work as planned just to see that I had a letter posted to my account stating that my funds were returned and that I needed to contact my lender. I am really tired of UPO. I'm three credits short of getting my Associates Degree and all they want to do is play around with people's money.
Reviewed Dec. 30, 2011
I would not advise anyone to attend this school. They mislead you and lie about everything. This school had me taking courses when they knew I did not have any financial aid approved yet. This school should lose their so-called accreditation! This school should be closed.
Reviewed Dec. 28, 2011
I would not recommend this place to anyone. I attended UOP for a very brief time, like for two, maybe three classes. I then began to experience a family crisis that was really affecting my school time. I called my adviser to inform him that I was going to have to withdraw from school. He told me I had to take another class, before I could withdraw. I of course struggled through another class, and if my memory serves me correctly, I believe I failed the course. I contacted my adviser again, and informed him I had to withdraw. He told me I couldn't. I told him if I continued, I would surely fail school. That conversation went back and forth, till I told him I would withdraw myself, and not attend classes anymore. That was what I did. Here I am years later. I continue to receive harassing phone calls, trying to force me to pay for classes I did not take. Why should I have to pay for something I did not participate in? They are still harassing me.
Reviewed Dec. 26, 2011
I enrolled in the University of Phoenix ecampus with hopes of receiving a degree that would assist me in a career change and help me to teach on a college level. The advisement I received when enrollment was to go into this one program and I struggled but got almost finished. It was discovered that there was not much I could do with that degree.
During the time that I was at UOP, I received such bad advisement. My first academic adviser constantly reminded me that she had 400 other students to advise. And she allowed for three matters of academic issues caused by professors and ill teaching (and that is true, not an excuse) to float through that I ended up missing some very important classes and things got out of order. Then the next time, I received another team of advisors. And the financial advisor allowed the time limit on filing for financial paper to go through that I missed it and almost had to pay the school. She never filed my papers - never. Her supervisor casually admitted the mistake and acted like it was cleared up.
The next team - I went through a personal issue - a depression time and called in plenty of time. I told them what was going on. I sent in my papers with the idea of coming back in January. I explained that I didn't know what dates to put and asked for help with that. I explained that I had no job and no access to a fax. Yet, the financial advisor said that wouldn't do. And even after I came back out of the hospital, I thought they had taken care of, I persisted in pursuing the matter, even though I am sitting there telling her I am in a crisis mentally and emotionally and being treated, and she kept on and on. I had to go back to the center to get some meds adjusted and I got letters from the school and my financial aid was sent back.
Those are the three times that the school has screwed me over and not been willing to work with me. I would understand it if I was a bad student and gave them trouble or was failing or didn't do what I was supposed to do.
Reviewed Dec. 22, 2011
I was a victim of the university of Phoenixs swindling actions that pushed me into financial debt that I will forever be paying for with no degree to show for it.
Upon completion of my final course, the original amount that was due and that was being paid on, somehow doubled. By the false guidance and oversight of my financial advisor, my balance tripled and was accommodated by a due date of 7 days prior to submission to collections. As I reviewed my account summary via the student website, with all payments, costs, and refunds calculated there is no evidence pointing in the direction of the accused balance. In addition, the final course taken was covered by financial aid according to the financial advisor which it turns out was inaccurate. I informed my financial counselor prior to taking the course that I am unable to pay for the class out-of-pocket and the only way I am able to complete the course with financial aid coverage. This is when I had a feeling that something was suspicious. Every time after that, when discussing my financial aid and out-of-pocket balance, the financial advisor pushed for communication of figures/numbers, via phone and not via email. Now I see that, it was the financial advisors intention to not leave a paper trail of the falsely communicated costs.
As I continue to attempt to resolve my financial situation and try to get straight answers on what happened, University of Phoenix continues to side with the financial advisor as this has become a he said, she said situation, leaving another former student left with nothing but debt and completed courses, but no degree. Leaving a student feeling taken advantage of as they sit a few months away from graduation which they will be unable to participate in because University of Phoenix decided to throw a financial wrench in, at the last minute not even allowing for a financial resolution.
Reviewed Dec. 19, 2011
I have been attending this school for the last two years. Every time that I look up, they are suspending my class, despite their financial director telling me that they get the money in advance. When I call the Department of Education, they transfer me to the Fraud Department. They keep suspending my classes without telling me then. When I go in to start them, they have decided I owe them more money. They get all this money in advance then they want me to send them more money. This time, I am three classes away from being finished with this school. I am taking two of them now. Now they are telling me for the third class I had $1000 available. But I can't access it without filling out another FASFA and fund request, because I've already taken eight classes.
This is absolutely ridiculous! This is how it is every single time I get new classes! I have fought with them every single time, for every single semester for two years. I keep getting a new financial advisor and they never know anything, just give them the money. Now it’s going to cost me $1168 for the last class. But if I want to wait until next February, it'll be paid for when I request more funds. Or, I can fill out the FASFA and give them $168 out of pocket and request another $1000 that they already have! But they said I can’t access it!
Reviewed Dec. 15, 2011
It’s terrible. Do not waste your time or money going to this school. I completed my MA in Curriculum and Instruction in March of 2011. It is now December and I still have not received my diploma or transcripts after multiple errors on the part of both finance and advising. In fact, in November I thought it was finally all a done deal when I submitted my application for diploma for the third time and have waited out the 6 week processing time. Lo and behold, I got a response to my inquiry of where the hell is it of "Could you please forward a copy of your application?"
Besides this ridiculousness, the classes are below par and so are the instructors. This degree is not worth the time or the money. They charge you over a hundred dollars per class for a resource fee (aka the textbook), which is a total rip off. A lot of times you could find an actual textbook on the web for cheaper. Not to mention, one of the "textbooks" for one of my classes was from 2004! Please go to a different school. Save your time, money, and from all of the aggravation and get a degree that is actually worth something!
Reviewed Dec. 15, 2011
We keep getting robocalls for a Camion **. No Camion ** lives here and never has. We are very tired to receive these calls. Please have them stopped. Thank you.
Reviewed Dec. 15, 2011
I was in the MA of Education program and getting above B average. I did not pass my student teaching and had passing grades in the coursework. I now owe $40,000 and no degree and no jobs for teachers. It seems strange that I did not pass the student teaching but was passing all the coursework. My student teacher did not take the time to mentor me from the beginning, she was pushing me off. I felt like I was railroaded and now with the recent economy, I have no job and can't pay the student loans. I have had to file for bankruptcy and I have no degree from the university.
Reviewed Dec. 14, 2011
They tell me nothing but lies. They hold the funds illegally for 6 months, collecting interest on my money. I filed in June, and received it in November. I withdrew, and they said they'd keep my credits, or at least not document them. Lies! The professors are morons, and don't respond or grade, until aid is messed up. They soaked up $13,000 in 10 months. They are absolute criminals. Now, they want $400 more from me! For what? I was at +371 with them when I withdrew. Why not keep that too and leave me be? I haven't paid it yet on principal. Please contact someone who knows your rights! They cant keep your credits. Only officially withdrawing, and changing your FASFA will keep UoP out of your pocketbook!
I am enrolled in a new university now with an adviser, who is fantastic, who never wastes your time or money. She printed my credits from UoP, so I could attend a real university. She put out my funds 24 hours after they are dropped. She is professional, knows, and follows all FASFA laws. Get this, she even advises you on how loans/grants will affect your future. She doesn't waste my aid on nonsense money draining classes, but directs me with my AA, on which classes will meet my goals, not just making the schools bank roll.
Reviewed Dec. 14, 2011
I am currently in a 4-year bachelor's program and may graduate on Dec. 2012. My entire education has been a nightmare. My financial aid has never been right, and the advisor never returns calls or fix anything needed. When enrolling, I got a call everyday non-stop until I finally said okay. I automatically completed applications for grants and student loans, not having a clue on how they worked and just thought is was a process of enrolling. Anyways, as of 10/13/10, I had my daughter and could never rest from school or I would get kicked out of class and it would mess everything up. So I stayed in school and done all assignments before I went to the hospital. I even asked my primary doctor to induce me because I had to work around my school so I got induced so I could complete my entire 5 weeks worth of homework, and still working a full time job.
I scheduled to have my baby right before class night so that I could skipped 1 day, which was all we were allowed to miss and that next week, I was in class and should of been on bed rest after delivery for 6 weeks and was also anemic. I went to class to participate and still continued on even as of today. I have even seen classmates in class with a staff infection and not released out of class by the teacher, and sat there so he/she wouldn't fail. They don't take anything into consideration.
So now I have a new teacher who has never taught a class and I am one of the students in her new class. She has no clue of what she is doing and I have neither learned anything nor other students, which have complained to advisors as well as me. She not only could not teach but did not grade me accurately and I have asked 2 times to review and she is brushing me off, and my advisor said she would have to be the one to fix that and she is not trying to do that. If I do not pass, then I would have to pay cash for the class again.
Is phoenix just trying to get more money? I know for a fact some of my grades are not right but she still fails to implement the way she graded. She grades very low considering the only point given for the assignment and now I am about to fail and in order to continue, I would have to pay out my pocket. The teachers across board do not grade the same. Out of 3 years, every teacher grades on how they want to. Some teachers would give you your full grade when you didn't even do it right and say, 'Well, you tried." Then others grade you horrible when the classes are only 5 weeks long and not covering all areas to begin with.
I may not get my education as planned and my grades don't look good when teachers grade differently. I can answer 1 question and one teacher will say for effort, I give full points even if wrong and the other teacher will fail you saying that you've done it wrong but you not getting points for effort. If I fail, it will cause Phoenix to have to get $1200 out of my pocket before I could continue, which I don't have and then my graduation will be put out even further.
Reviewed Dec. 11, 2011
I attended the UoP around 2006. When I first started, everything seemed really good. I was trying to get a degree in I.T. I was doing really good, completing all of my assignments and getting good grades, until I was accused of plagiarisms which was not true. But they suspended me and never would review my case. I had only been attending for about three months, but I had to pay Sallie all the money back over $3,000 for months of wasted time and effort. They never send the money back to Sallie Mae. This should be against the law.
Reviewed Dec. 9, 2011
I had made a mistake on my final paper. It caused an academic review. After the review, they found it to be an unintentional use of author's wording. The problem is that they cancelled my financial aid before they found out what is actually wrong. I have talk to the university. I explained the fact that I was passing the class before the paper and if there was a mistake, they could have given me a non grade. I would have passed the class even if I did not submit my paper. What they did was fail me for the whole class. This made me financially and academically ineligible. I tried on numerous occasions to tell them it was wrong to not to give me the existing grade that I already have earned. Now, I lost my financial aid. I have to repay for the class I failed but they said I could appeal for the lost monies so I can get the money back. I must pay for the class to restart classes.
This has caused me to have a collections agency to get the money for the school. I have tried to tell them I would pay them but they say no, they want it all up front. I feel like they did not find out the entire truth about this mishap and it caused me to be in this financial problem. I wanted to speak to someone and they all say, well, the only way back is to pay the bill and we will reapply for financial aid to recover the monies I had laid out.
Reviewed Dec. 8, 2011
I too am upset at the length UOP takes, in getting right answers to veterans using their benefits, and getting ripped off, by this so called no report issue of attendance. I was told by a retired military enrollment adviser, that those days not counted as attendance, were not being deducted from my contract with the Veterans Affairs Voc Rehab division. This school actually thinks that people have no common sense at all, and can be told anything just to get them off the phone, and when questioned, they resort back to "it's policy, and that isn't going to change anytime soon" and blames congress for this.
Another thing is that, if I decide to change schools, none of the credits I received from Phoenix will be accepted, and this is where Phoenix gets to keep veterans on their books in order to receive more money, because we are veterans. This is a sham, and a poor excuse for a higher education facility, promoting greater chances of placement in the IT field by at least getting one of their degrees.
Profit mill is all this school really is, and concerns about instructors, abusing their powers and students, being called names by those same instructors, have fallen on deaf ears. As long as they can keep you stone walled, they will. Had I not already been in the repair part of the IT field, I would be so discouraged to attend this college. I wish now I wasn't so trusting, and kept to the reviews I had already read about this school. Now I am stuck attending, because of credits not transferring to another college. Thanks allot UOP/Axia, you have really made a name for yourself, as part of the problem with big business.
Reviewed Dec. 7, 2011
I have had a terrible experience with the University of Phoenix. I did not get two of my Pell Grants, and would not have a paper accepted to become a student of the University of Phoenix. I have a 2.8 grade point average, and got into a disagreement with a girl. I then went all the way to Baltimore, MD in the summer, to take care of the disagreement. Now, when I am supposed to get my Pell Grant after a year, I am suspended, when I went to school the entire year before after the incident. I have had my paper not being accepted by Mairice **, and got through an email that I had a disagreement with my professor. The school is a financial beat. They let me go to school for a year and then I got suspended. I have to go to another school. I am not getting my degree next year. I am not getting my Pell Grant, which I do not have to payback, and I have no platform to voice my concerns.
Reviewed Dec. 7, 2011
How can I rate my bad experience? I have no clue if this will provide a good review for University of Phoenix. I am nearly graduating, three classes away from obtaining the BSN in nursing. I am due to take the nursing practicum today, 12/06/2011. However, the financial counselor dropped me from my class because I was told I have an aging balance of nearly $600.00. I was warned about a month ago that I have a balance due that needs to be paid. I made a promise to pay for this bill in two payments. One for 11/15/2011 and one for 12/15/2011 for 281.00 each. I was unable to make the payment on November 15, 2011 because I did not work at all for almost two weeks.
I am an on call RN at UCSD. I only work when I am needed. I was fired from my full time job last May 12, 2011. I have no means of paying the balance. I told Tarrah ** that I am unemployed, I needed help to finish my education. I am nearly graduating this coming March 2012. But because I didn't have the money, she decided to dropped me from my class that is supposed to start today, 12/06/2011. I feel I am treated unfairly. This school does not care about students. All they want is to collect money. I thought there is a way I can finish by deferring the balance to be paid when I graduate or prior to graduation, but there is no mercy. The financial department insist to collect despite of the students situation. I am a single mother of a 10-year-old boy. If I make any money for the month working per diem, I will be sure to pay my rent first, then food on the table for my son before I pay for my tuition fee.
Is there any help I can get from Consumer Affairs? What kind of help did you offer to the students who had negative experience with UOP? Please contact me. I was offered to file for change of income to see if I would get approve for a grant, but since Tarrah did not collect $281.00 today, she decided to just totally dropped me from a class. Because of her actions, my funds on my account will be returned back to FAFSA. In addition, UOP insists the funds that we borrow from FAFSA is held on their account. This funding is never sent to the students. I requested from UOP to have this funds sent to me, but no action was taken.
At the end of the day, I am responsible for what I have borrowed after I graduate. Why does this school insist of keeping the funds from FAFSA. Please investigate this for me. Thank you.
Reviewed Dec. 1, 2011
I have been using my post 9/11 GI bill while taking OL classes. I am five classes in on my BA and completed my AA with UoP. I have not received any BAH or book stipend since they passed the new amendment that OL students get 50% of BAH, which is $673.50 starting October 1, 2011. I learned today that UoP does not count the 5th week as attendance, so this in return does not ice me the full amount from the VA but only $530.00.
When I called they told me that Wednesday-Monday’s attendance goes on the next Tuesday, so they really do not report the first week or fifth week as attendance to the VA to give us the amount we are suppose to be getting. I do not think this is fair. If I have to do assignments and participation which counts as attendance for the fifth week, then this should be reported to the VA. Why should they be allowed to only claim me attending four weeks instead five weeks, which is what all the BA programs are?
I told them today that either I need to get full credit or I would be switching schools. They said it was my decision and kept telling me the same thing over and over: it was their policy and it has not changed. I have been doing UoP OL classes for almost two years and now it changes. Why should they be allowed to jip me out of the benefits I paid for and worked hard for? I asked her if I was not getting attendance reported for the fifth week, which makes it look like I am only doing 4 weeks and taking a break for a week, which I do not, and my classes are back to back, then why should they get paid for all 5 weeks of class since they are only showing me there for 4?
They didn’t like this answer so much and she kept giving me the silent treatment. I am contacting the VA now and seeing if I can verify my attendance on the wave to get the full amount I am supposed to get. If not, you can bet UoP will no longer be getting me or my husband’s money, which is $1800 a class each. I explained this to my flight chief and he has routed it up to the general of my base and I was told this issue will get resolved. If they do not want to treat a veteran with respect and have integrity, it will come to bite them in the ** and payback as well as pay out is going to hurt!
Reviewed Nov. 28, 2011
I initially signed up for classes at the University of Phoenix in May 2011. I decided to pursue an Associate degree in Healthcare Administrative/Medical Records. Everything seemed to be going great until November 2011 and the problem was with my financial aid. My finance counselor stated that I was overawarded at my previous school, which led to University of Phoenix financial aid department having to refund some of the loan money back to the lender. My finance counselor stated that I was overawarded with my Pell grant but also overawarded with student loans too. The confusing part is the counselor initially told me that I would not have any out of pocket costs because it was an error on their behalf but now she is stating that I owe them $3,597 due to their financial aid department errors. At my previous school, I never had any problems and since I have transferred, I have nothing but problems with University of Phoenix.
Reviewed Nov. 28, 2011
I enrolled to the University earlier this year. I was asked which class I'd like to enroll into. I chose my desired course to get my Associates in Network/Web Design. When it came time to start up class I seen that the classes scheduled for me were directed towards Personal Finance. I asked my Counselor and my teachers about this and they told me that it's all required to get my associates. I said okay and started my classes. I made it to the final exam. I completed it for the class. A few days later, I got a letter in the mail saying that I was dropped from classes due to lack of attendance.
From what I recall, you cannot proceed further when you miss three weeks or so. How was I able to take my final exam and how did I have almost perfect scores on everything if I had a lack of attendance? Now I'm stuck with these bills. I did what was told of me and now I'm dropped from the classes. I do not understand how they can say I didn't finish my classes when it said that my scores were great.
Reviewed Nov. 23, 2011
I was going to the University of Phoenix online. I had to withdraw due to going through a divorce, not being able to concentrate due to that, which included me having no job or place to live, etc. I did not know at the time that unlike the community college, when I withdrew that even though I paid with financial aid, I'd have to repay that and my transcripts would be held.
No one warned me of this when I told them I was thinking of withdrawing. I told my counselor and academic adviser. I did enjoy going to the school online and I made good grades. I didn't know withdrawing would effect me and the rules were so different.
I've been trying to go to other colleges using my high school transcripts either for the same degree or maybe for a different degree since those transcripts would have nothing to do with it/not effect it if it was a different degree or at least I could maybe start over.
No such luck. I can't find one legitimate school that I can transfer to. I am in bad shape and don't have a lot of money. I can't get a loan/grant, unless I'm enrolled in school and I can't do that without the transcripts.
I won't be able to pay the school for the transcripts unless somehow I get a full time job that pays for everything plus extra to save to pay them. This is not very likely. I've been trying since I withdrew.
I really want to go back to school, so I can get out of debt, be more educated, have a fruitful life. I was going for education to be a teacher, but am open to other options. Although, I'd rather continue my degree. Does anyone know of anything I can do?
I won't be able to go back to school to get a degree and therefore have a better life in the future. Note for contacting: My phone is out of order due to lack of funds. Please email and then I can contact from another phone. Thank you.
Reviewed Nov. 17, 2011
I started with UOP in March 2010. I am able to go to college because of the Post 9/11 GI Bill. I am covered 100% by the VA so UOP should not need to hold my FA. I know it is available because it is credited to my account and yet they will not give it to me. I literally survive on this small amount of money and it enables me to go to UOP in the first place. I have begged for it and yet it is still sitting there in my account. I am going to have to quit at UOP because I am going to have to go back to work full time and will not be able to do both. I need this money to attend!
Reviewed Nov. 16, 2011
I got my degree from Phoenix University. I have a Masters on Business Administration focus on HR. I have a student loan that is about $45000. I just came across with the news about UoP. I have read that any employer would not hire people from Phoenix University. They see this school as a for profit and they do not want to deal with students from this place. Resumes are set aside. Is there anything that I could do? I am having to pay for something that did not embrace any rewards to my career. Please help.
Reviewed Nov. 16, 2011
When I signed up for the Associate program with the UoP, the enrollment specialist told me the degree program would equate to becoming a Pharmacy Technician. I completed the degree with this assumption, only to discover nothing I studied would suffice for the certification exam. I decided to continue with a Bachelor in Psychology instead. However, my graduation advisor did not have me complete the correct forms. So, I started into the wrong degree program. She advised I should complete the first class and everything would be correct for the rest of the program. She explained that I would have no additional math classes and could double-stack my classes after the first four blocks were out of the way. But, after completing the incorrect class, my financial aid was adversely affected.
My new advisors told me that the UoP would waive the fee for that class, but months have gone by and nothing has been done. I cannot order transcripts because there is still an outstanding balance. Furthermore, my financial aid has been cancelled and every request for information has been avoided and ultimately deferred to management, which also has no answer. Additionally, the degree program is void of two state mandatory classes and the double-stacking option was apparently contingent upon my willingness to forgo financial aid entirely and pay for everything out-of-pocket. At over $1900 for each class, this is entirely unreasonable.
To make matters worse, the graduation advisor has been fired for incompetence. Not only was her statement that I would not have any more math classes false, she had told me to sign up for the Alumni Association to be paired with a mentor who would help me secure a job which is an outright lie. There is no career counseling, nor is there support for financial aid problems. All attempts to resolve the issue in a way which would not hinder my educational path have been disappointing and fruitless. Even contacting Dispute Management did nothing to solve the problem. It has only delayed it.
Reviewed Nov. 15, 2011
Lies and misuse of funds because he did not fill out the paper work for my Pell Grant. Now it is November while I did it in August, they made sure that they set the disbursement in the beginning of the next block of classes so they will get paid for those classes. Why? I made the mistake and expressed my dislike on how they are handling my finances. I personally believe without a doubt that they are holding those funds; I already completed my 12 credits so under the policy they should not be holding my funds. Even now, I am still hearing from them 2 more weeks! Someone needs to do something about this. It is so unfair!
Reviewed Nov. 15, 2011
Back in 2003, I had enrolled in their online program. I had used a student loan and a Pell grant to pay for my classes. I had passed my first classes with no problem. When my second classes started, I then noticed some issues. The online teachers were hard to reach, and they didn't respond until after the assignment was due. Due to these issues and also realizing that their costs were high, I ended my classes with them.
Two months ago, I decided that I was going to get my degree but in a real school. Yesterday, after leaving the community college financial aid, I found out that I had to contact Phoenix to get my transcripts. When I called them, they told me that I couldn't get them until I paid a balance of almost $4000. Basically, this school has ruined my chances of going to a school and getting my degree.
Reviewed Nov. 15, 2011
This school has a problem with giving falsified information and mishandling financial aid funds. They have been telling me for two weeks they have 90 days to certify me, which is not true because I went here in 2009, and nowhere in their policy states that. Then another person claim they haven't received funds, which FAFSA informed me the funds were disbursed. Yet, when I look in my account, they already have classes lined up. They invoice you for before you even start.
Reviewed Nov. 15, 2011
Well they sent me a letter today stating that my federal financial aid has been denied. They didn't give a reason. This is about 4 or 5 months after I enrolled. I think they continued to schedule classes for me while knowing my financial aid was denied and failed to inform me.
Reviewed Nov. 14, 2011
I have been attending UOP since aug29. I was told that I would receive my finical Aid like 30 to 45 days after I started. I spoke with Kent and he said I got lost in the mist of all the paperwork. He said once all my transcripts are in they will be able to send my finical aid for certification. It was done in Oct. Then my disbursements suppose to go on Nov 11. I waited Nov 14 to see why the disbursement has not been done. I was told its going to take another 3 weeks for them to dispute and another 3 weeks for to disbursement to the school and another 3 weeks to get to my bank account. I have been in school 3months and no finical aid. What do I need to do? After this class I will be changing school.
Reviewed Nov. 14, 2011
I have been waiting for my financial aid now 4 months and still no answers, but they are still billing me. This is crazy!
Reviewed Nov. 11, 2011
I have been dealing with councilor Ted ** from the San Diego UOP. If you have him, good luck! His lying, and lack of follow up is unbelievable. This school tries to set an example of being exceptional, and professional, when it's the complete opposite. The tuition alone is ridiculous, and the fact that it goes up every year no matter what, is also unbelievable.
When I started at UOP the tuition was $1,200 per class, when I finished, it was nearly $1600 per class. The online courses even cost more. Save your money and headache, and go to a traditional J.C. and real college university. My councilor, Ted **, is a complete joke. He's the biggest liar, and he can not be trusted.
I spent the last 7 months checking in on him, regarding my transcript request. He supposedly sent it back in May. After contacting my J.C. admissions office to check to see they received the request from UOP, they informed me they never got anything. I attended a JC for my lower division courses, due to the cost. I spent the last several months trying to call him to check in, along with emails. He never answered his phone, and would only respond through email.
After a dozen of emails checking in with him, and also calling my J.C., and UOP Student Services, I found out in the end he never sent the request to begin with. Finally, on August 30th, I sent him an email telling him to call me, because it's been over 4 months, and nothing was being done. UOP Student Services even said they never got anything from him.
I asked that he call me and also send the proof he sent the request, or notes in my files. Of course he couldn't produce such a thing, and continued to tell me, they don't keep these kinds of notes on file. When he finally called me, I was pressing him on the issues I was having with him, and in the middle of me pressing him, he finally slipped up and said that, they do in fact have such notes on file.
The next day I received an email from him stating, he's going to re-order my transcript, along with the note from admissions that said the date (which was the day after we spoke), the school, and what was being ordered. How clever! It's funny that the truth finally came out over the phone, when he doesn't have an email to hide behind. He never ordered it originally, is the conclusion I came to, or else he would've sent me that simple note from admissions, like he did in the end, and would've sent it the first time.
The advise I would give to those thinking of going through this school would be, don't, but if you do, keep everything in writing over email and always follow up on the phone. Don't trust these "councilors" with your livelihood. They, and this school, will ** with you.I paid a lot of money to this school, only to be completely disappointed and frustrated in the end. I still don't have my degree, and I am still waiting on them once again.
Reviewed Nov. 11, 2011
I have been a member of UOP for almost 2 years now and am now having problems as I get closer to graduation. It seems as if I am being forced to drop a class to extend my stay at UOP. Keep in mind that this comes after the fact that I have notified UOP that I will not continue my education with them after the 2 years of education are finished. Could this University be involved in forcing individuals to drop classes systematically to prolong education periods and ultimately collect more finances from students? Something is surely not right here.
Reviewed Nov. 10, 2011
It has been over 2 months this year now, since I have not received my reimbursement. University of Phoenix has been just taking money from my account, showing I do not have enough money to pay for my classes, yet I am still enrolled with no answers.
Reviewed Nov. 10, 2011
I am in the process of finishing my 9th class which is a little over a third of what would have been masters in nursing. During this time I have had a wonderful adviser but the finance department has issues. For those that were able to walk through without difficulty and do not believe these complaints, I have copies of emails and phone records to show the communication issues and the faulty finance department.
I have been making good grades, near perfect and I'm transferring to a local university 100% funded for the military so that I do not ever have to hear another word about student loans. No one gave a straight answer and when I was finally able to contact the manager of the finance department about where my money was, she said it was in my account at UOP.
When I told her that I managed my own funds due to the military tuition assistance helping, she stated that UOP might not be signing their agreement and felt it best to hold back enough to pay for the classes because according to her screen shot, my tuition assistance was over. I corrected her by letting her know that it renews in October, which is not her business but mine.
When I told her about how the lack of communication was unprofessional, she (the manager) stated that she would give the three people I had been through (thus far) a "pep talk". At this point, I decided that since none of my credits would transfer to the local university; I was going to start fresh where I could march in to the finance department and sit down and talk to someone who could not ignore me and could not brush me off.
Talking down to graduate students is not professional in any level. We are adults past the level of college entry students and deserve a little bit of respect. I have perfect credit and unlike one person's earlier response, I am not leaving anything out (shame on you, by the way). I am sure that UOP will try and send my FASA money back at this point even though it has been fixed with FASA as to the college that I am attending.
I am prepared for the hassle they have already threatened me with. I have to send paperwork from the new university to my FASA student help desk case that I have already opened. I enjoyed all but one course and I think it is very sad that a good student is going to start somewhere else because of the finance department. Usually students transfer or drop due to classroom or personality difficulties but in this case it is strictly the headache of dealing with the finance division.
So far UOP has threatened me with many things for my transfer. I will have to update when I am sure of what they are going to try and follow through with.
Reviewed Nov. 10, 2011
I have been enrolled in the University of Phoenix Criminal Justice Administrators program (Little Rock campus) since September 2009. In November of that same year, I was hired at Walmart. Since I was hired at Walmart, I was able to receive a discount. My financial counselor had to change and was no longer on the campus, but in Arizona. Besides the fact that my financial counselor was so educated about financial aid, he would use language that I didn't understand to answer my questions and we would sometimes be on the phone for hours until I just give up trying to understand.
I still thought he was an alright guy. Perfect example: One morning on my way to work, I called him to ask him one simple question because I was not near a computer at that time. How much is my tuition now that I received a discount? We spent about an hour and a half discussing that question until I was late to work and I still did not get a straight answer. So because of how hard it was to get a straight answer from him, I rarely want to talk to him.
The issue that I am concern about began this year. Back on May 4, 2011, I received an email from him asking me if I wanted him to redo my financial aid. In the email, which I have (I still have all his emails), he stated that he wanted to redo my financial aid and that we will just resubmit the same application from the previous year. He also said that I need to let him know by May 9, 2011 so that I would be financially secured for my next class that began on May 19, 2011. I gave him the okay to redo my financial aid, believing that he was doing my FASA because this was the time that FASA was excepting applications. At that time, instead of doing my FASA, I did not know that he requested a private loan different than my FASA because he didn't tell me. I started finding out about it in October 2011.
In the beginning of October, I went to the school to finish my homework. As I was sitting there, I asked one of the financial counselors (UOP) who was there if he could show me how to look up my FASA to see when I will get my next disbursement. When I looked on the FASA website, it showed that I did not do my FASA, which was strange because I remember getting it done. I thought that I had done my FASA wrong, so I asked the financial counselor (UOP) if he would help me do my financial aid and he did. The financial counselor (UOP) advised me to call and tell my counselor in AZ to check the process of my financial aid next week. I did what the financial counselor (UOP) told me to do.
When I called that following week, my financial counselor acted as if everything was fine. At this time, I still did not know that there was another loan he had received for $9,500. Because I remembered discussing something about my financial aid, I went back and checked my emails and that was when I found the email from May asking if I wanted him to redo my financial aid. At this point, I no longer trusted him because he asked me to do my financial aid and sent two more messages after that, confirming that everything was taken care of, but never once informed me that this loan was not FASA. I wanted to have control over my own funds, so I called to request that. I was advised that I would have to wait until my next disbursement. In that same conversation, I asked him why he did not tell me that I didn't do my FASA. He apologized but ensured me that now, everything was fine.
I asked him how were my classes being paid for if I didn't do my FASA in May. He then advised me about the loan. He stated at that time that my 2010-2011 financial aid disbursement did not cover all my classes and that we needed to get another loan. Another financial counselor and administrator (UOP) confirmed that if there is not enough financial aid to cover, then your financial counselor has the authority to request a loan. But it was also said that he would have to first give me a notice about the amount of the classes not paid for, how much those classes would be, if I wanted to pay out of pockets (if not, then how much of a loan "subsidized or unsubsidized") do I want him to take out to cover those classes? I didn't go through one of that process. As a matter of fact, he keep saying that we had a conversation in April. This is where he says he advised me that my class was not going to be paid for and even then, I gave him an okay to get a $9,500 loan. I do not recall that conversation nor was it sent in email to me like all the other conversations.
The next few days, I sat glued to the computer trying to figure out how this process works because this is my money that he is playing with. So I thought of many questions to ask him pertaining to the situation and that's when I started discovering that this man cannot be trusted. In the first few conversations, he stated that the reason for the loan was because I didn't have enough to cover all my 2010-2011 classes (this was when I asked him why didn't we use my Pell since I am supposed to receive what's left over after all my classes were paid for). So I did the calculations on the amount not paid for and it seems that the amount not covered by my 2010-2011 was only $119.00. So to me, it didn't make sense to request a $9,500 loan. So I asked him, "Since you said that my 2010-2011 FASA did not cover all my classes, how many classes were not covered? How much were the classes? Why you didn't you tell me this?".
He stated something different from what he has been telling me. He stated that the classes not covered was my 2011-2012 semester classes, which I believe the money from FASA would have covered 2011-2012 if he did my FASA instead of another loan from somewhere else. What didn't make sense to me is the fact that the $9,500 loan would not cover my Pell grant funds, so why would he even seek that money to cover 2011-2012 knowing that I would be expecting a Pell back? Me and my financial counselor had spoken about this issue numerous of times in the month of October and in November. It was not until this last conversation I had with him. On November 6, 2011, when I asked him "so, what you're telling me is that this year I have taken out a $18,000 loan?". He said, "yes, $19,000 to be exact".
What I am really indicating is he knew this the whole time we discussed this issue and withheld that information from me. Plus, it was not until I exposed that fact that he suggested that he send some of the money back. I told him, since he has the funds and did not tell me how much he had (and in a few months I will have control over this matter anyway), I told him to hold on to the money until I find out what he was doing. FYI, that $19,500 does not include the $9,500 that I submitted in October. The $19,500 is only the 2010-2011 FASA I did last year and the loan he did in May. So in all truth, it is $29,000.
Reviewed Nov. 9, 2011
It was the same thing. They are taking my money. They are always saying I owe them money. I want to file a serious lawsuit with this school. They have taken so much money from me by having me fill out major loans. It was bad, worse on a scale. I say they are the worst school.
Reviewed Nov. 9, 2011
I completed a FAFSA for 2011-2012. I was approved for federal student loans and for class, then I was pulled out of class. I was told that the $1000 plus money that UOP had been sitting on and never returned to lender or to my self when I originally enrolled would not be sent to me. It would have to be mailed to me then mailed back as payment for the class.
Once, I paid for class with that money I have waited for months now. And class has ended, and there's no word on when or if I will have student loans. Can I sue UOP, which is a piece of crap of a school?
Reviewed Nov. 7, 2011
I had several conflicts with the level of professionalism and concern pertaining to my financial aid adviser (Alanna **) and my academic adviser (Jenn **). My main issue(s) are with Ms. **. Her rude and uncaring attitude pertaining to my needs and concerning her mishandling of my Pell Grant in June/July 2011 and processing it for the wrong year was the deciding factor for me in leaving this university. Noting that I didn't receive my Pell Grant disbursement until 9/4/2011 when I should have received it 7/15/2011.
Reviewed Nov. 6, 2011
I have been in class since June of 2011 and right when I was in the last three of class, I was asked to present more documents of who I am. I was so mad with this company because I faxed and emailed these documents to the financial aid and they still would say that they had not receive any of them. I was told that my financial aid was put on hold because I needed to send these documents to the school. I finally finish my class and pass them both with a B. My financial advisor never returned any of my calls and I could never get in touch with a supervisor. Finally, my academic advisor finally asked me to fax the documents to him so he could give them to the financial aid.
Since they have received the documents, I have been put back into classes with the balance of 4500 dollars I owed. I have not received anything about my financial aid and cannot get in touch with any of my counselors. This is the worst school, they are unprofessional and do not care anything about their students. Now, I am in classes and do not want to continue to go to that school but what can I do, I have not received any type of funds.
Reviewed Nov. 4, 2011
Back in August of 2011, I began 2 courses after the birth of my newborn. One of those classes was MAT/117 (Algebra). I did poorly in the class and recognized this so I dropped the class to retake in the future, on its own, so that I could focus on it fully. However, I was liable for the weeks I had been present in the dropped class. $500.00 was the amount I owed, half the beginning of the course and half by the end of the nine weeks. I recently made that first payment. On Friday, October 28, I tried to submit the payment via online debit card draft. I tried several times, with each time resulting in an error screen disclosing that my payment could not be processed and that I must try to make the payment again later. The following day, I made the payment by online check because if the funds were not received, I could not continue taking classes. The following Monday, both payments came out of my checking account --the successful check payment and the supposedly "unsuccessful" debit card payment.
Reviewed Nov. 3, 2011
I have been with the UOP since April of 2010. I am supposed to complete an Associate’s Degree in Healthcare Administration. I decided about halfway through that I would not benefit from this degree and would like to stop. I was told over and over that if I stopped, I would end up owing money from grants that had already been given. I continued in my classes. As I got to the end, someone added 2 algebra classes to my courses that I had already told them I did not want to take at UOP. When I attempted to get them taken off my schedule, I was told that I had already been awarded grants and loans. If I dropped them, I would have to pay back approximately $2500. So, I agreed to take them.
My mother passed away and I was given a 60-day leave of absence. About 2 weeks after I started my classes, I got a letter stating I had lost my grants because I was out of school too long. I spoke with some people who told me that it was an internal error. I was told that if I refiled my financial aid, the university would absorb whatever was left. I was satisfied with this solution and agreed to continue. Now my paperwork will not go through and suddenly I am out of class. And I was told I owe about $3500 to the university. I have had 3 or 4 different advisers and no one remembers these conversations suddenly. I am taking classes I don't even want to take. And no one will even explain to me what is going on. I would advise everyone to stay away from this college.
Reviewed Oct. 26, 2011
I have been a student at UOP for the past three years. I have been experiencing grief and frustration over the past five months in dealing with the Financial Aid department and with my current Financial Aid advisor Amanda **. I have currently switched employers and needed to take a 6-month leave from school. My academic advisor, Carrie **, had done as requested scheduling my classes to start in January of 2012. However, I am extremely reluctant in continuing with UOP in pursuit of my Bachelors Degree in Accounting.
My continued issue is I have $2,571.90 that should be available and released to me as of May 2011. I have been keeping track of my deposits made to UOP from my Student Loans and Financial Aid as well as all other account transactions such as e-Resource fee payments, and Employer payments dispersed to UOP for my classes. Somehow and somewhere there is a disconnect and UOP is reflecting a credit balance of only $1,534.50 and states that I need to take another class before it will be released to me. In short they have cheated me out of my money and expect me to give the last bit of money UOP reflects as my balance to them.
According to Geoff **, my previous Financial Aid advisor, I needed to take one more class, which I paid for myself because according to Geoff the rest of my money was tied up awaiting payment from my employer at the time. Geoff had stated to me that once I take this last class, BUS 475, and once my current employer pays UOP in full for my previous classes, I will receive the money owed to me. I have since then completed BUS 475 and my previous employer has paid UOP in full.
I have tried to be patient with Amanda. I have tried to be helpful to Amanda by sending her my Excel Spreadsheet that I have created to aid myself in keeping track of my money UOP has on hold. I have also attempted to decipher information Amanda has sent me and compared it to my data in hopes to find the gap between $2,571.90 and $1534.50. I went as far as sending Amanda screen shots of my account history from my UOP student website so Amanda can see where I am getting my information from. I have done all of this and have asked Amanda repeatedly to please look at what I had sent her and to see if she can find the gap. She ignores my request, and when I try to verify with her if she is going to look at my information I get no response. No response from Amanda is her way of telling me “no”. She refuses to help me without saying the words.
I have given Amanda times that I am available to talk over the phone, but she has not yet scheduled a time to talk with me over the phone to clear this matter. I have since then requested from Amanda her supervisors name, phone number, and e-mail address. Amanda sent me an e-mail stating she will have her supervisor contact me. Another two weeks have gone by and I have no response from either of them. I sent Amanda a notice again that I have not heard from her supervisor and to please send me her supervisor’s information so I can contact him or her. I heard nothing from Amanda for another three working days. It wasn’t until I send an e-mail to Amanda stating I was going to contact BBB (Better Business Bureau) and UOP formal complaint department that I received a phone call from both Amanda as well as her supervisor Ryan **.
I have not yet spoken to Ryan due to my 55+ hour work week schedule. However, speaking to Amanda or Ryan at this point in not enough for me in resolving the grief and frustration I have been experiencing for the past five months. I am done trying to talk to the little fish in the pond and request that I speak to someone of authority. I understand UOP employs students to do the work of professionals. This is an obvious mistake. By doing this UOP is expecting students to handle requests of extreme importance while taking classes to learn how to properly execute the jobs they are already facilitating. Let’s not put the cart before the horse and instead hire individuals who have acquired experiences and possess the skills and knowledge to properly perform the job they are being paid to do.
Reviewed Oct. 26, 2011
UOP is a college not a high school; we make a choice on where we go and if we don't look into all of the information before hand that is not on anyone but us. I will be walking in Nov. with my AA in Human services and management. I agree the courses are hard and the price is expensive but the school offers you choices. Going year round is something everyone is told before the classes start. There is a break for Christmas and that is it, but that lets us get further, quicker. If you are having difficulties with one person go in and ask to speak to someone else.
I am sorry so many of you have had bad experiences here, but there is a fit out there for you and if you keep looking you will find it and the help you need, there are endless resources out there for those willing to look hard enough. You can do it. But bashing UOP because the school didn't fit you isn't fair or right. There are some very serious complaints here and for those I hope things change in your favor, as for the others, as adults we have to be aware of our choices and our actions. Nothing will ever change if you're not willing to challenge yourself and the barrier. Good luck in the future to all of you.
Reviewed Oct. 23, 2011
Carolynn **, an instructor, is accusing me of plagiarizing my final paper. This is completely false. I cited and referenced everything, yet she had "academic issues" and placed a nonappealable warning letter in my file. I am seeking legal counsel.
Reviewed Oct. 20, 2011
University of Phoenix has been a nightmare. They have held my loans for at least 8 months. When they came out, all my classes were paid for. All I have to have was 36 credits to get my disbursement. Now she was telling me that I have to have 15 credits to get both of my disbursement, which I think is totally **. I am going through discrimination at this school. And I feel that I have a case, in which a teacher gave me an F because he said that a D- is not academic as a passing grade. Now I am going through so much drama. I know I have a lawsuit against this University of Phoenix. If there are any lawyers out there who want to take this case, I would definitely appreciate.
Reviewed Oct. 19, 2011
I am having a problem with financial aid. I have an award letter stating that the anticipated date of release was 10 Oct 11. I did receive an unsubsidized and subsidized loans along with my Pell Grant even though I am in my last 12 hours of the associates program. I am being told that they will release my Pell Grant on 8 Dec 11 for the end of the program. If I have gone this far in the program and have signed up for the Bachelor's program, why would they have to hold my Pell Grant when it is money that I do not have to pay back?
They took my school bill out of the Pell Grant and cannot tell me what they did with the unsub and sub saying that they are holding the funds. I have asked for them to expedite the transaction because the Pell is for a student to make it through the semester with school related expenses. They are supposedly emailing a manager in financial aid to see if they can expedite, in which I know they can. It has nothing to do with the last of the program. Same number of hours each semester, I do not understand their inadequacy and inept manner of handling students' financial affairs.
Reviewed Oct. 18, 2011
The financial counselor is incapable of performing his duties. He is unaware of how to handle funds for students and has often made many mistakes on my application. It has been near three months since the scheduled release of my disbursement because he is inept. He has changed the dates for my disbursement for August to January for unknown reasons. It is now mid-October and I am still waiting on my August Pell Grant, which was approved, but he is mishandling funds and/or paper work.
The processing time is 45 days, why would he put the release date for January? I believe that I am a victim of a biased person bent on extending the time for the disbursement past its eligibility date in order for me not to receive it. I am traumatized by this experience because it is not only nerve wrecking, it has also taken a mental toll on me. I am now receiving counseling for it because of my worsening depression.
Reviewed Oct. 17, 2011
My first financial aid advisor gave me a hard time about wanting to manage my own financial aid for college education. He talked down to me as if and stated the only reason I was going to school was to get the money. In order to get the credit balance, that by the time I would receive it, my next block of classes would start and would have to turn around and send back anyway. I was embarrassed, humiliated and felt guilt for wanting to pay as I went to college. I filed a complaint and was contacted immediately.
My computer crashed and I paid for it to be fixed online, only to find out the hard drive was corrupted from a virus. So I had to get another computer, along with other household and health problems that made it very difficult to continue. I filed a complaint and received the money within ten days. They also told me I would need to pay for one of my classes. Well, with everything I was going through, instead of someone from college telling me the other option to help to avoid ruining my chances of continuing my education and owing a $2350.00, I was instructed to apply for a private loan or scholarship because the college was out of funds.
My credit history disqualified me from private loans, therefore, would need a co-signer. Several new credit inquiries did not help. I had less than 30 days to apply and receive any scholarship funds to continue the next block of classes. Now, I got reminders of outstanding balance and have to exit the program. Before I can continue with Phoenix, I must pay my balance. Also, they will not release the transcripts to continue with another college.
Reviewed Oct. 13, 2011
I am a combat veteran and intended on getting my BA at University of Phoenix. I was informed by the Veteran representative that I would owe $200 a course while attending and also would be receiving over $600 from the VA while attending to help pay for the $200 and also some money in my pocket. I ensured all of this before I signed any paperwork and then three weeks into the first course, I get a call from the financial people and they informed me that I owe $600 dollars per course. I could not afford that and tried to inform them of the original agreement from the Veteran representative. They told me that it didn't matter and that I signed a paper stating I would owe whatever the VA did not cover. I have saved every paper and email they have sent to me as well for records.
Now, they informed me I owe over $1,100 because they dropped me from the course due to the financial situation. I have tried to be civil and have informed them of the original agreement and they don't care. I have been put through a lot of stress and feel they are now harassing me on a constant basis because of their faults.
Reviewed Oct. 12, 2011
I was awarded a full Pell Grant and a student loan. However, my funds have been on hold for months and months now. Somehow I had a $2,775 Pell Grant just disappear into thin air. They haven’t given it to me nor do they know where it is.
This school is a rip off and they are out to get people and not help them. This is a diploma mill and that’s it. They only care about themselves and not our education.
Reviewed Oct. 10, 2011
I have had problems receiving grant money awarded to me and paid to the school. They still have not applied it to my account. They are now stating I may not be awarded this money due to time limitations, although I have been requesting it for months. They have sent me to collections. I know I had some sort of a balance but not the amount they are insisting. I since have made a payment through the collection agency to minimize the balance they say I owe. This of course has not been credited to my account. I feel like I wasted my time and money, because the classes won't transfer over to other schools. And I can't continue there because they will not let me finish without paying off the balance.
Reviewed Oct. 9, 2011
I had a fellow student who did not want to be a team leader. After I stepped up to the plate, volunteered to write the first paper for the team, and began to set the guide lines in getting the paper started, she started being controlling and arrogant. She claimed she didn't understand and another student said that time lines make him nervous. She said I was rude because I said "hello people".
Since then she acted as if she was the teacher. Telling the team what to do and how to do it, being pushy and very bossy. There was never mention about team, nor questions about what the team wanted to do. I complained to the teacher and she said to work it out ourselves. I knew that wasn't going to work and insisted that she get involved.
For the last two weeks of class, the teacher began to watch my every move and condemn me for my every effort. She treated me like I was a child and not an adult. Insisting on my apologizing to the class for my behavior but said nothing of the other student. She went as far as publicly humiliating me in front of the class. She threatened to fail me. When I didn't feel I needed to apologize, she said I was rude to everyone, didn't post a significant amount of work and then accused me of committing plagiarism.
She then in turn failed me. I feel she failed me not on plagiarism, but used it as an excuse because she didn't like my personality. Up until I complained about the other student, I had a good grade and nothing was said about how many post I had.
Reviewed Oct. 8, 2011
I received a Bachelors Degree in Business Administration from UOP. The potential employers do not view University of Phoenix a scholastic institution. My degree is worthless in the business world. It is a "joke". The college credits will not transfer to other institutions. And I have a student loan debt of over $30,000.00. The time and money spent to obtain what I considered one of the biggest achievements were all wasted because of the business practices of UOP.
Reviewed Oct. 7, 2011
I started last October 2010, and when I was talking to a girl there, she said it is the best college for older students. I said no at first, but she just talked and talked until I gave in because I needed my degree.
I did have a little problem during the first week because the teacher never told us everything. I made an A- during the first 9 weeks, and I had to reapply for another loan again in December 2010 and got two checks for $66.00. I had to apply for another loan in May 2011, so I did. A week later, this girl from Financial Aid said that I had to file again, and I did but she later told me that it did not go through. They dropped my classes and told me to file another form to get my two classes started, and it showed on the home page too.
At the end of 9 weeks, I got a call saying I owed them $465.00 or I could pay $35.00 a month after they got the money from the loans. I got another call from the first two boys listed above, saying I needed to take out another loan, and I said no I cannot because I am disabled and cannot afford to pay them at that time, but they just talked and talked and made me upset and nervous. I hung up on them, and after taking the last loan out and paying $35.00, I dropped out because of how they talked to me on the phone. They said they were right and that I was wrong so I never got any of that money back and the $35.00 I paid was to pay for some medications I was taking, which I could not get at that month.
Today, I emailed them just to see about getting back in. One said that they would be happy to get me back, but I had to take care of the two classes I dropped two days after I started in which I paid the $35,00 for 2 other classes wherein I just got one, so they are mad again.
Reviewed Oct. 7, 2011
The financial aid department with this school was absolutely terrible. I did not receive my Pell grant until almost a year and a half after I started school. When I needed to get a hold of someone from financial aid, it could take a week, and I apparently got signed up for a student loan I didn't need. I am still trying to come up with the money to pay it off. I am a Marine Corps vet and using my GI bill to go to school, and every BAH payment was very late, and less money than I should have been getting. One of these payments was so late I had no money that month for groceries and went almost an entire week without food.
Also, the education seemed like a joke. I was barely trying and doing extremely good. I felt like the school was a diploma mill. Needless to say, I left and now I am at my new school, doing great and whenever I need help from anyone there (including financial aid) I get the help immediately. University of Phoenix is a horrible school and thanks to them I got cheated out of a year of my GI bill funding. Thanks!
Reviewed Oct. 5, 2011
I had requested a Leave of Absence and it was granted for 60 days. When I went to my account to pay for my next class (as I am not eligible for Financial Aid for this class, working on doctorate), I found that an additional $5,000 was added to what I owed. It turned out that the UOP inadvertently denied my LoA request at first, but then realized their mistake and corrected it by approving the LoA. What happened is that they refunded all my loans that were used to pay for the previous taken classes and in turn, told me that I had to pay for it. They told me that they are trying to get the money back, but if they do not, I will be responsible for the money they refunded.
Reviewed Oct. 3, 2011
I called UoP in late 2009 to find out how much I owed so that I could start school. I asked them to check three times but they came up with no information. They enrolled me in school and I completed school all the way until I finished three classes to graduate. Then, a bill came up. They harassed me until I filed a grievance and won. But now, they have sent my bill to collections. I am pissed because I called on three separate occasions to find out how to pay my bill when they locked me out of my student system. Please help!
Reviewed Oct. 3, 2011
I received my AA in 2009 with UOP and it started out to be a good campus. I later decided that I would get BS from them but I started having a hardship with my family around about the fourth class in Bachelor. I could not understand why I had to pay 600.00 dollars to drop the class for my first week. The counselor told me that it was because I went that first week and that's what I owed, so they ended up taking the 600.00 dollars out my refund that was due back to me.
Another problem I have had with the Bachelor program is the learning team assignment. About three assignment are based on team work and I think that it is sad that my grades have to depend on someone else. In the real world, your daily work will depend on no one else but you. I also have a problem with those teacher who have no remorse about your personal life and what happened to you.
Another problem is their system called turn it in, where you submit your paper and if you turned your paper in the website it suppose to let you know if your paper is similar to someone else. I received 1% of similarity for my feedback and when I got my paper back, my instructor gave me a 0 on the paper. I think that was really unfair and I am scared to say something because I am trying to get 60 out of that class and pass; but my concern is that I should have gotten at least some points for the paper.
My finance was messed up this time and I have been calling about it but they keep telling me that it was coming yet it takes them so long to release the money. This school really needs to be closed down with all the complaints and the cost. It looks like every semester, the cost is going up and you can't even get a job when someone looks at your resume and see that you attended the University of Phoenix.
I have six more class but I will not recommend this school to anyone.
Reviewed Sept. 30, 2011
I completed all but nine credits for my Bachelors Degree. I had a death in the family as well as a newborn. I have tried to re-attend the school on several occasions; however, they will not recognize the credits I completed. They are not requiring another 45 credits to be completed. They claim that the modules have been upgraded so the classes are not recognizable. However, they do recognize the Associates Degree I attained in the 90's.
Now, I owe 12k in student loans for credits that mean nothing to the institution, where they were completed. I am very angry with this institution and believe that they are taking advantage of the consumer. I am now without a degree, no hope for completing the degree and I owe 12k in student loans for worthless studies.
Reviewed Sept. 30, 2011
I was a student at University of Phoenix, and I was behind. I had three events happen in my life in one week. I had a death in my family, someone broke into my house taking my new laptop and I had a run-in with the Detroit police. I was not given one day off or allowed to turn in any late assignments. This lead to me not passing the two classes I was enrolled in.
The admin told me to call the teacher in which I called her and left messages. The teacher, Toni **, wrote I could not talk to her, only online. The admin told me to call her and call them.
This was very depressing. The police was called when the break-in happened and I now have a lawsuit pending against the Detroit police. I'm asking if someone died in your family when you have a day off work! Education is very important to me and I can't believe how this has affected my life. I want to return to school, I do not have $2300 to repay the university and I really feel I was not given fair chance.
University of Phoenix has no policy to help a student in a situation out of her control! This should be against the law! I was comfortable with using the online program so I really don't want to go to another school. I'm confused.
Reviewed Sept. 29, 2011
I was a student back in 2004. I had applied for financial aid. I had all of my documentation and I qualified for Pell Grants. After being enrolled in 4 classes, University of Phoenix came to me and told me that I owe them $2700.00 for classes. This was after I had been approved for all that I need, as well as using my GI bill for school. I have been in collection with them and they will not release my transcripts. Most state colleges will not let me attend without these. So, I am at a stand still because University of Phoenix will not get themselves together. This last spring, I hired an attorney and basically put a suit against them to have them remove the debt from my record as a false input to my credit. I won. Yet, they still tell me I owe this money. I suggest you do not use this university at all. They have not a clue what they are doing.
Reviewed Sept. 29, 2011
My monthly stipend payment from the VA for my Chapter 31 benefits has been affected due to UoP policy on attendance reporting. The August 1st change made by the VA, stating that break time would not be paid, in conjunction with UoP not reporting the last week of an online course accurately, has created this problem. I was instructed by my VA case manager to contact UoP for direction. Per Vincent **, the UoP policy states that the last week of the online course is not reported to the VA for payment, based solely on the policy itself and not the facts. This is not an accurate way for UoP to report, as myself and all others attending courses online are in fact attending and participating during that week and are not being paid because of the current policy and the false information that are being reported to the VA by UoP.
Reviewed Sept. 28, 2011
After taking out a loan and having my classes paid for, I was affected by the southern flooding where we had no electric for weeks, and no place to live. My classes had already been paid for but I had to try to get an extension from my teachers for the make up work. I have a teacher who said okay with no problem, but the others were a pain to deal with. Both teachers said there was no way for me to make up class discussion or participation. They also drop me a letter grade automatically. How fair is that!
I decided not to complete the work and just change schools from the horrible way I was treated. Mind you my classes were paid, but now I am getting a bill for $2,100 from a collection agency and I cannot get my transcripts. I have filed a formal complaint with the Department of Education and am willing to tell every one, do not attend this school! It is a rip-off! Now I can't attend another school until I get my transcripts! AXIA or University of Phoenix, whatever you name it, is very unethical.
Reviewed Sept. 26, 2011
I was going to start CHM 101 class and I found out that they charge more fees for software that you need to have to take this class. It came out to be over $200 more for that class on top of the already $295 a class. They even told me that I could not use my student aid for this.
Reviewed Sept. 26, 2011
I'm not sure what is going on with all of you guys, but I believe you are leaving something out. I have been with UoP since early 2010 and never had a problem like this.
I have been through a deployment and my classes got disrupted more than once for more than 90 days at a time. I was never over-charged or got harassed or had anything on my credit. This has been a very good experience and I am astonished that you have such unreliable claims. This sort of slander is what causes the rest of our tuition to go up due to lawyer fees because for whatever reason, you didn't hold up your end of the bargain.
In response to the person saying they were charged for their next two courses after the withdraw, how? Every class I take there and the people I know are signed up for course at a time. So how did you magically (unknowingly) sign up for these courses so they could charge you? They are not common muggers on the street. I am sure someone in this thread has had legitimate problems with them but from what I have seen, it is just some bitter people that wanted something handed to them and they didn't get it.
Reviewed Sept. 22, 2011
University of Phoenix financial aid department will say whatever they can to get out of giving you your Pell Grant. This has happened the 2 years I have been with the school and I let it go last year and am experiencing it again. I received an award letter and then my Pell Grant was distributed to the school on September 14. I was waiting for the refund.
I am now only being given $625 of the money. I am being told that the credit on my account (even though it says Pell Grant and I have the letter to prove it) was actually an error on the school's part from 2009 and they owed me $625. I looked back through all of my account history and nowhere do they owe me this money. They also changed the date of my loan disbursement, pushing it out 3 months (was supposed to be 8/9/11 and now 11/4/11) and because of this, I cannot pay my next 2 classes which the loan in August was supposed to cover.
I am being told that I will have to either pay out of my pocket or set up a payment plan. This doesn't make any sense to me because my loans are supposed to be paying for my school. I have never been more upset. Also, they will not return my emails even with questions. They are only calling me and I fear this is to avoid a paper trail on their end.
I signed a contract with them regarding financial aid and they are not withholding their end of the deal. This is the third time there had been an issue with money and they have tried to hold it or say it was not mine and in the end have had to refund me. This time, I fear that isn't going to happen based on what she is telling me.
Reviewed Sept. 21, 2011
I had been with the University of Phoenix since July 2010 and at first I loved it. My advisors were great, but this past July I had to drop my Algebra because I just wasn't getting it. So I had to send in a drop credit request form, I printed it off and faxed it.
In the meantime, I got a new financial advisor, Ryan, who waited a couple of weeks then called and said that he never received my form so I faxed it again and sent him an email saying it had been sent.
Surprise, surprise, he called a week and a half later and said he did not receive it. So by the time I misplaced it and had to reprint it and refax it, little did I know that they didn't accept the forms in text format and that's the only way my printer would print it. So I had to go to my local library to print it and fax it. I faxed it three times to make sure he got it.
The next day he posted an exit letter to my account and sent my financial aide back and they are now stating I owe them $1,175. Mind you, they just sent back $2,500 in excess funds back to the Financial aide office. I even contacted a higher person and they have yet to contact me back and it's been since Friday.
I will never recommend the University of Phoenix to anyone.
Reviewed Sept. 21, 2011
I attended University of Phoenix in 2000 for a degree in information technology. At first, I was told I had all my undergraduate credits I needed. Then midway through my first semester, I was called in by admissions and was told I had to take 10 more classes to make up the undergraduate classes. That was fine and I made arrangements to CLEP out of them.
About the same time, I began taking a class with a professor fairly new to the campus. Up until then, I had accumulated straight A’s. This professor asked me to stay after class after the fifth session and tried to convince me to meet him at a nearby hotel and have sex with him.
I said no, and as I walked out, he threatened to fail me in the class.
At that time, I was a student representative and I had a good relationship with everyone on campus. So I thought if I brought my complaint to the student advisor, they would help me resolve the issue. The advisor didn't believe me.
The professor cornered me in a hallway the last night of class. He tried to feel me up and attempted to push me into a dark room.
I found out he failed me and I brought my grievance to the University of Phoenix and the head administrators.
After the second complaint, I was labeled a troublemaker. I lost my role as student representative and was asked to transfer campuses. I was also told that the professor said I plagiarized and I was lucky I wasn't dropped from the program. I couldn't believe what I was hearing.
I looked into furthering my complaint up the chain of command, but was balked at all levels.
Reviewed Sept. 20, 2011
I am a sophomore with UOP. It has been seven months and they are still holding my loans. I have passed my Math Course which the instructor gave me an F for and my grade point average is 60.8. My financial advisor told me I should not came that close and I told her I am not perfect. I passed it and they are still holding my funds and not only me, other students as well.
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2011
We are having several issues with loan agreements. UOP cancelled the master's degree program for Teaching and did not notify my wife. They agreed to let her change her bachelor's degree major and assured that there would be no financial increases. But a call today from a financial aid person states my wife must pay a $1,000.00 after each disbursement. We were not informed of this and the financial aid person stated we cannot apply loan for the $1000.
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2011
I am a student also. My classmates and I have also been wondering how is this school getting away with taking all of our financial aid plus loan money and then telling us we still owe money! They claimed I owed $700. I took out another $4000 loan to cover the $700 and to have extra cash. They took $3000 of the $4000, when the financial advisor told me I only owed $700! If there is a lawsuit, they should contact every single student!
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2011
I received my MAED with certification from UOP online. I was allowed to double up classes and complete student teaching with no issues. I received my teaching certificate in a timely manner. I have had no issues with UOP and they have been a tremendously easy college to deal with.
Someone complained that their wife got no breaks? Okay, so the classes are back to back. If you want a college that gives you lots of breaks, I urge you to go find one! That is just silly.
UOP treats military members fantastically and even though I always read negative stuff about UOP, I had a different experience!
Oh, and because I am giving a positive review, how many people are going to start saying I am an employee? Tons! Well, I am not. I am kinder teacher. By the way, most of my co-workers complete their CE's through UOP. It is a teacher-friendly school. But here is a warning. You can't quit and expect not to pay for the class. Maybe some schools prorate, but count on UOP not to do so. If you can't stick with the classes even through emergencies, don't pick UOP.
If you start a class, you will be expected to pay for the entire class regardless of deaths in the family, hospital admissions or any other (usually valid but not always) reason. And because the classes are 5-8 weeks each, you may run out of financial aid before the next cycle and have to pay for it out of pocket. But it's usually only one or two classes before it kicks back in again. It isn't fraud, it is just the process. If you can't afford to pay for one or two classes out of pocket, maybe UOP isn't right for you either.
Also, if you think UOP is a degree mill and you won't have to put any work in, then let me assure you UOP is not for you. You will be writing APA formatted papers nearly every day! You will have to devote 20 - 30 hours per week in each class to succeed. And if you aren't a self-starter with lots of motivation, UOP may not be for you. You have to be disciplined, which may explain why the military has a different experience with UOP.
Okay, so go ahead and say I must be an employee to justify this positive review, but for those of you who are here to actually read real feedback, I am not an employee or affiliated in any way at all aside from being alumni.
Good luck!
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2011
I was in my final class for my MBA in 2004. My computer experienced a significant failure. I obtained permission from my professor to turn the final assignments in late as it would take me a few weeks to replace/repair my computer and I had no access to a substitute in the meantime. The professor never graded the late assignments, did not respond to correspondence until after the class had finished, and gave me a failing grade for the course. This brought my GPA to 0.2 below the requirement for graduation.
I was denied my degree by the university. Upon filing a complaint, I was informed I would have to take out more student loans and not only retake the failed course but also add 4 more courses on top as my program had "changed".
I hold $65,000 in debt to the university and no degree.
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2011
I am currently enrolled in UOP for my Associates degree in Psychology. I would be working towards, at least my Masters and maybe my PhD. I enjoyed my online classes; it gave me the time to work when it was convenient for me, usually very late at night and early morning hours. I have just completed my first year and am in my first second year classes. I had every intention of staying at UOP to obtain my education, at least through my Bachelors.
I have maintained a 4.0 GPA since the first set of classes I have taken. I have an A in my Psychology class, and have never been told anything about my writing. However, my ETH class is another story. My facilitator, I refuse to call her an instructor or teacher, has been very biased in her grading. Why? I do not know. She manages to find something wrong with every paper I have turned in. I had never had points deducted for going over a word count. I thought it showed eagerness. While I thought it would stop there, it has not. I have been asking since week two to please move me to another class because this facilitator obviously has something against me.
I have spoken to other students who have also gone over the word count and never had points deducted. It gets better; she began to deduct points for my writing skills. She would ask a question in the assignment for us to compare our lives now to when our ancestors came to America. Ok, no problem. She deducted points because I used the letter I. How do you write about yourself and not use I? I have a dear friend, who I met in my classes at UOP. We are in every class we can be in together; we have one class from each block together because we have different majors.
My friend let me read her paper, which is not unusual. We would have one another read the others paper for proofing and stuff. As I read her paper and feedback and she read mine, she saw the unethical grading I had been complaining about. She used I in the same paper and had no points deducted. My husband claims the facilitator is prejudice, because my last name is Hispanic. I don’t believe that, at least I hope not considering the class she is trying to teach. Another assignment was name leaders from the Civil Rights Movement, which I did as did my friend, both of us would have points deducted. The reason, we did not stay within the years of the movement, I am sorry but she did not state that anywhere on the Appendix or Syllabus. It is because of this facilitator that my GPA will drop significantly.
I have complained to my AA and am told there is nothing I can do but file a grievance basically, at the end of the course. Wow! I do not think either person realizes what this is doing to me mentally. I cried when I saw the amount of points that get deducted every week, more importantly this is making me want to not attend school. The best part, if I fail or drop the class, I will have to pay for it out of my pocket and likely be placed on probation. I am beginning to think because I have done so well in my classes that someone has told this woman to single me out and deduct points anywhere she can. I run my papers through Write Point, which checks for any grammatical errors, punctuation errors, etc.
My papers had no errors. I had points deducted for not placing a page number on an in-text citation, which is kind of difficult to do when it is a website. I have had it with this facilitator and just about had it with UOP. I am going to be checking into other schools once I receive my Associates degree because no one seems to want to do anything about this. I think the facilitator needs to take an Ethics class herself. I cannot divulge any names. My friend has offered to send her paper and feedback to my Academic Counselor. She said it is unfair and if I am going down, she will go down with me.
She is a great person. How hard is it to just place me in another ETH/125 class? I know there are other ETH/125 classes that are at the same place I am in this class. I would have recommended UOP to anyone but not anymore. I would not have a problem if she was really being ethical, however I know she is not and nothing is being done. Thanks UOP for doing nothing while this facilitator destroys my GPA and future! My other instructors were great. If they deducted points here and there from an assignment, they would explain why. If I had a question as to why points were deducted they would explain why to me, and that was fine at least I knew unlike her! I would have recommended anyone to UOP until now.
Reviewed Sept. 17, 2011
I just opened a letter from UOP, dated September 13th, saying that I have been withdrawn from the University for having a break in attendance for greater than 14 consecutive days! With this being the 4th week in my bachelor's program class, I find this confusing since I have been attending and participating for longer than 14 days! I am really confused and upset and would like to have some idea of what might be going on. I should note that I have been taking one week breaks in between classes but when my new class starts, I post right away!
Reviewed Sept. 15, 2011
I went to see the school and possibly enroll into the IT program. I made myself very clear that I could not afford this school, unless I would have financial aid and possibly be covered by some student loans. The enrollment counselor assured me that I would be financially covered at least by financial aid. So, I signed the contract to enroll into school. On the first day of school, I came home. There was a letter sent to me from the financial department of U of P. It stated that I would not be covered and that I would be solely responsible for the payment of the first quarter. I contacted the school and basically got the runaround with no help in the matter at hand. So, I withdrew from the school after only attending 1 day of 1 class.
Reviewed Sept. 15, 2011
I would never ever attend UOP. I made a simple inquiry online about online classes for general purposes. All I was doing was inquiring, Lord knows. I've battled a constant flow of phone calls from this school, even after telling them I was not interested in their program. I've told them I am on the “do not call” list and will report them. Yet, I keep getting calls. Lo and behold, now I'm getting tons of junk mail from them. My inbox is full of junk emails and I'm still receiving calls. This school is all about generating profits for itself by enrolling student through aggressive tactics, misusing FASA loans, charging student account against guidelines, its own and the federal government, and continuing harassment by enrollment counselors. Enough of this school is enough. I would advise anyone with issues to get legal help, even if through legal aide. Call your local representative through your district. Call the FED financial aide people. Do not take this sitting down at all. Places like this prey on people and our tax dollar. They will go after your money anyway they can !
Reviewed Sept. 15, 2011
I attended the University of Phoenix and was finishing up my Associate's Degree in Human Service Management. I would e-mail my teacher and ask her for help and she would get back to me, but for our final project, I asked her to help me and she walked me through the steps through e-mail, so when I completed my finals, I did everything exactly like she told me and I ended up getting a zero because of plagiarism. Me and the teacher continued to exchange e-mails about the whole issue and nothing was resolved.
I talked with my academic advisor and he made me aware of a grade grievance that I could do to see if the school could overturn my grade. So I had a balance on my account of more than $102 and I decided to wait and pay them until I heard something back from them.
I waited a month, two months, finally a third month later, I got a letter in the mail stating that my grade grievance was denied because they do not handle plagiarism claims. Through the whole phase of me waiting, I never received a letter stating that, if I was not enrolled in class, they would send my money back. This was never ever stated to me since I was going there. So my balance goes from more than $102 to more than $1200. I found out my balance by looking at my account after I got the letter. The bad thing about it is that I never received a warning letter or a letter letting me know that they were sending my financial add back.
I am not able to pay more than $1200 and I spoke with a collection agency. They offered me more than $300 settlement with Ava and she said that I would have until July 15th to pay the amount. I called on June 30th to get the exact amount but I was told a totally different settlement. I was asking how it changed when I had until July 15th to pay and I never could get an answer. So I have tried calling again and when I called the collection agency, they said that my account was cleared and I could re-enroll and call the school but when I called the school they said that my account was not cleared and they sent it to another collection agency. I have called them over several times and no one in the school can tell me where my account is and what settlement they can offer me.
I just want to make everyone aware of the practices. So I have one credit left and no one will respond to me about my account. They will not transfer any of my transcript or credits over, and I was not informed on their policy until after my account went up.
Reviewed Sept. 14, 2011
I've been a student of UOP for several years. I completed my AA and then transitioned to the BA program. I have carried a 3.0 or better GPA during my time at UOP. My education experience at UOP was positive until the end of 2010. Up to that point, my academic advisors and financial advisors were doing a great job of providing coaching and guidance.
The last finance advisor I was assigned did not provide any financial guidance and I was surprised to receive a bill for $8,000 from UOP. During the summer of 2010, I experienced a family tragedy that caused me to miss several assignments and ended up failing two classes. When I contacted Alston, he advised me that since I failed 2 classes, I needed to pay the balance due before returning to school. I'm not sure how my balance reached $8,000 since that exceeds the cost of the 2 classes I failed. I was advised by Alston that my financial aid had been revoked and any loans proceeds on my account were returned to the lender.
Now, I’m stuck. I do not have $8,000 and I cannot attend school. I asked if I could make payment arrangements and I was told that I have to let my account go to collections and that I can make arrangements with them, but bottom line, I cannot return to school until the $8k is paid. Maybe my previous advisors set the bar too high but Alston was a disappointment to me. I was not advised of the financial implications until it was too late to recover. I asked Alston for suggestions and he basically blew me off. I asked to speak with his supervisor and I was told ‘they were unavailable’. I called and received a member of Alston's team and she simply refused to get me to a supervisor.
At this point, I have spoken to several people, been bounced around to several departments and then referred to University Science (collections). The person I reached told me that she couldn’t find my records and would call me back. I’m still waiting. At this point, I am completely stuck. I’m 33 credits and $8,000 away from achieving my Bachelor's Degree. UOP promotes themselves as a university for the working adult. They say they will help adults reach their goals in life. That seems to only happen for a select few. I can’t even seem to get a copy of my outstanding bill. No one knows who has my bill. Ideally, I would like to continue my education while on a payment plan for the outstanding balance. However, I've never been made fully aware of why I owe $8,000. Given my history with them, I’m surprised they would leave me in limbo. At the end of the day, money is the only thing the UOP cares about.
Reviewed Sept. 13, 2011
I am being discriminated against because I am a military veteran. I tried to drop a class after the first week, and the academic counselor and financial coordinator slowed roll my emails so they could charge me more money from my GI Bill. UoP now wants me to pay $800. Please help me.
Reviewed Sept. 11, 2011
After enrolling in the Bachelors of Science in Management, and taking seven of the dozen classes that I needed to earn that degree, UoP refuses to file the proper paperwork with the Department of Education to get me the necessary funds to complete the final five classes. What is the problem with this institution? None of the people working there can answer a question. They are rude, cocky, and totally uninformed. I even went so far as to have a conference call with the UoP financial aid manager, the representative from the Department of Education and Direct Loans to have them explain to the financial aid manager but she still doesn't get it. None of us can figure out what her problem is and what UoP's problem is.
Don't they want to have their students realize their goals and add to the university's graduation rate? UoP is not responsible for repaying the student loans, I am. So why can't she fill out a simple form that can be obtained from any reputable, accredited institution of higher learning? Is it laziness, stupidity--or maybe the founders of this university are unconcerned about their students after they have them enroll. What a total scam. If there is a way to get in on the class action suit, please let me know.
Reviewed Sept. 8, 2011
I signed up for an Associate Degree in Hospital Admin/Billing and Coding. They talked me into it, stating it would be better if I did this instead of billing and coding. So I agreed.
After complaining about the courses I was getting, which don’t seem to have anything to do with my degree, I finally made them give me my course list. There were no medical courses, except one billing and coding. Then they told me I would have to go to another school to get a certificate for that.
I dropped out and enrolled at Kaplin, where I am getting just what I need for my degree in Medical office management, which includes billing and coding. University of Phoenix states I owe them $2,000 and will not release my transcripts, which I made B's in my classes. So I am going to have to take them over again.
Reviewed Sept. 8, 2011
I was enrolled for one semester in the fall of 2006. They pestered me for months to get enrolled and the pestering bordered on harassment. I finally enrolled and was registered to take an online course. I don't remember the course or the professor's name. I was doing well and even the professor was telling me this. Or so I thought, until the final week when the thesis was due. I handed it in on the last day before it was due and thought about the good grade I would receive, however, I received an F for my final grade. I was shocked and outraged that I received this grade. I tried contacting the professor and the administrator but to no avail. I did receive a letter from the administrator that the grade still stands. This was all the explanation I got. After demanding an explanation I was put off and ignored. I have never been treated this badly from any university I have attended and their accreditation should be taken away.
Reviewed Sept. 6, 2011
I wanted to go back to school so I tried to do this using the internet. I was called by The University of Phoenix and was enrolled into one of their programs which seemed like what I wanted to take and better my future. Well, it didn't go as planned as all of the promises of being there for their students were never kept and when I needed help because I was having problems, they were not there and did not return my calls, emails or anything to help me get through the problems that I was having.
I asked to be removed from my classes because of their lies,deceit and promises to make sure if I had problems that they were there for me. They took money from my loans and grants and still say I owe money and on my loans as well. I have letters from them saying that they will give me credit from my classes but yet I still owe the money back. I don't want their class credits, so that I can go through this again? They are wrong in every way and I have emails to prove this. I need help with suing this University for the taking of my funds and not fulfilling their obligations to me as a student. They also threw me into classes without giving me any kind of tests prior to these classes to see if I could even keep up or if I knew what I was doing.
I haven't been in school for over 25 years and I think I should have been more prepared by this University rather than being thrown into a class that I was sure to fail. They are a fraud in my eyes. They stole from me and Lord knows how many others. They need to pay back all they have taken from my grants and loans and pay them back.
Reviewed Sept. 6, 2011
I am going to this school and asked for proof of where my aid and loans were and she refused. I think they are stealing money.
Reviewed Sept. 4, 2011
I recently completed all of the necessary coursework for my Bachelors of Science in Nursing degree at the University of Phoenix, online. When I initially started, I was told that I should expect overpayment of my student loan because loan far exceeded the cost of my program of study. Knowing that I was nearing the end of my program, I contacted my financial adviser, Martha **, who informed me that I would be receiving money (several thousand dollars, in fact) directly from the loan overpayment and that I would receive this money provided that I did not continue my master's immediately.
A week later, I received a call from Janet **, an executive enrollment advisor, who called to congratulate me on completing my program and to inquire about me continuing for my master's degree in Nursing. I told her that I was going to continue but that I wanted to wait because, according to my financial adviser, I would be awarded the excess loan money provided that I did not register for class right away. Janet seemed to think that this was incorrect and wasn't quite sure about what I was telling her and offered to contact my financial adviser for clarification.
Another week later, my financial adviser calls me and when I told her about my expectations based on what she told me, she began to tell me an entirely different story, explaining that my loan was prorated and that I would not receive any excess loan money and that I, in fact, would owe $5.85 (Yes, five dollars and eighty five cents) in order to receive my degree and transcripts. I expressed my frustration with being told two completely different stories by her; however, she persisted that the latter story was going to be the case. To me, this seems like a fraud because of the misinformation provided to me. I feel betrayed by my financial advisor. I was actually counting on the extra money to help with expenses incurred from sacrificing work for school.
Reviewed Sept. 3, 2011
Same as the other complainants. They are starting to remind me of organized crime. They used my Grad Plus loan to apply it to my tuition and materials. They did not grant me living expenses, and the loan I applied for $10,000 which the government found me eligible, the University of Phoenix only approved $1,400 and said it had to do with attendance. They are the only University that calculates their attendance in this manner. They do not provide clear itemized summaries or statements. Some lawyer needs to file a class action suit. By the time they did whatever they did with the money, I am only receiving $5,000 for the first disbursement and will not receive the other until April of 2012. How do they expect students to live? They just nod and smile and politely brush you off with "that is our policy".
Reviewed Aug. 31, 2011
I have been enrolled at the University of Phoenix since October 2009. I started in the elementary education online program and I was supposed to graduate with my associates degree on 28 Aug 2011. On May 2011, I was told that if I graduated from the online program, the state of Missouri would not acknowledge 20 out of the 50 credits that I had worked so hard and paid for. And I would be better off to transfer to the UoP campus here in Kansas City, Missouri. So, I transferred to the campus and started my campus classes on 6 Jun 2011 because the financial adviser told me that if I did not start within 30 days of my last online class, I would be dropped from the financial aid part of my program (I applied for a financial aid with living expense).
I was also told that once I started my campus classes, it would take 60 days until I received my first disbursement. On 29 Jul 2011, I received an email saying that I would be receiving my first disbursement on 01 Aug 2011. That day came and went so I waited to call my financial adviser to see what was the hold up. She was not in the office but I talked to another person in the financial department. The person simply told me that my funds were on hold but my Pell Grant is still being processed.
I then called on 8 Aug 2011 and was told that it was my Pell Grant that was on hold and my other funds (my unsubsidized and subsidized loans) would be released on 11 Aug 2011. After that, I called my financial adviser on 12 Aug 2011 and she simply told me that my funds had a hold placed on them but they will be released on 25 Aug 2011. I looked at my school account the next day (26 Aug 2011) and my financial adviser tells me that my funds were in and they were processing them.
In my past experience, when I would get a disbursement, the funds would be in my bank account the next day. Then, on 29 Aug 2011, I saw nothing in my account. I tried to reach my financial adviser but she was nowhere to be found. I called the next day (30 Aug 2011) and I spoke with my financial adviser asking her what was going on. She said that they have pushed back my funds until 09 Sept. Mind you, this will be 90 days after I started my campus classes. I have talked to several people in the finance department at UoP but nobody can get their story straight. Nobody can tell me the reason for the delay and the day when I will receive my disbursement.
The finance department is the first people to remind me that if I do not keep my grades up, I will not receive any more financial aid. But I have sustained my grade point average and these people are not keeping their end of the deal. I recently spoke to Patty ** at 4:45 p.m. and she tells me that she has the whole department looking into this problem. She adds that if I had waited longer than the 30-day period of ending my last online class and starting my campus classes, I would not have run into this problem. Like I said before, the finance department told me that if I didn't start within 30 days of my last online class, I would be dropped. Also, I would still have to pay $8,000 for the classes that were not acknowledged by the state of Missouri. I am paying these people to advise me on what classes to take. The university will be the first one to get their money and if I default on my loan, it will affect my credit rating.
Reviewed Aug. 27, 2011
I was a student there and got my AA degree. Once completed, I looked into other colleges to insure I would be able to complete my education without having to finance so much. I was convinced and told it would come out the same and bothered nonstop for months. I ended up going back for my bachelors. I was 70% done with my classes and got a call from financial aid telling me my aggregated limit for loans had come up and I would not have to pay out of pocket for the remainder of my degree. I explained to the financial aid woman I did not have $100 plus per month and would have to withdraw until I contacted the Department of Education to figure what the problem was. I completed my last class and was withdrawn from any future classes.
About 4 weeks later, I got a call from a collection agency telling me I owed them more than $2k and if I did not pay them, they would not release my transcripts nor would they allow me back in school to complete my degree. I explained to them this had to be a mistake since I had taken all measures to insure I did not owe the school any money. I ended up not going back and was under the impression that I could not attend any other school because I had exceeded my loan limits. Three months ago, out of curiosity, I applied at a new college and was shocked to be told that I had not exceeded any loan limits and they had no idea why any school would have told me that. I filled all my paperwork out and sent for my transcripts. They refused to give my transcripts to me until I talked to their collections agency.
I contacted the agency and explained although I did not feel I owed them anything, I would settle for the amount they offered ($800). The collection agency told me they had charged off my account and would no longer take my money! I was told to contact UOP and they would give my transcripts to me since as a charge off I no longer owed. So I did contact UOP and was told I had to pay off the $800. I explained what their own collection agency told me and they refused now to return emails or calls. I would never ever tell anyone to attend this college because they are very bad. They are being sued as we speak by the Department of Education for these practices. I am considering trying to find anyone with similar issues so we can file a class action law suit.
Reviewed Aug. 27, 2011
I have had the worst trouble with financial aid from University of Phoenix. I have not held a steady job in quite some time and have been attending over 2 years. Nobody ever keeps me up-to-date or gives me accurate information regarding how to go about the financial aid process. I have lived on my own for about 5 years and have been given many back and forths about how to best handle the situation and come out with the best outcome. As if classes at University of Phoenix are not already an arm and a leg, ranging around $2000 per block, I certainly cannot afford out of pocket. Even when they say I should receive money back, I have not.
Reviewed Aug. 25, 2011
I am a representative of the University of Phoenix and I would like to offer my assistance to those posting grievances below. I work in the Office of Dispute Management and we take complaints such as these seriously. If a student would like us to look into their issue, please contact us at ** or at 602-557-5566.
Reviewed Aug. 22, 2011
I am seeking some advice on what to do with an issue I'm having with the University of Phoenix. Last school year, I enrolled for a UP online course for continuing education. The course wasn't what I was hoping it to be, so I dropped it and then I was told that I would receive half of my money back. About four months later, I checked my checking account, and not only had I not been refunded, I had been charged twice. I contacted UP a few times about the issue and was finally told that the money would be refunded to me.
Now the University of Phoenix has sent me emails telling me that they will send my account to creditors if I don't return an amount they say they over-refunded me. Shortly after they said that I was over-refunded by $1000 due to a system error, I had to close my account because my bank card was stolen.
Checking out if they indeed did over-refund me will be a bit of a hassle requiring a trip to the bank. The question is, am I responsible for their mistake? Don't large businesses like this have insurance to cover their losses/mistakes? I used to work in a bank and many days the bank drawers would show a loss, but we never chased down account holders and asked for our money back. What can/should I do in this situation?
Thank you for your help!
Reviewed Aug. 19, 2011
Again, thank you for your acknowledgement of receipt of my inquiries. Unfortunately, the University of Phoenix (UOP) has repeatedly denied me a defined explanation which pertains to my unique situation. In its place, UOP has only quoted general excerpts from their university policy and any attempt to seek clarification as to how these policies relate to my specific situation. The uniform response has been, as quoted by Raquel **, UOP Relations Lead, "It is because we say so." This explanation has been and continues to be unacceptable as I have demonstrated and provided documented evidence; provided by UOP, of continued circulated UOP misrepresentations, threats, and alternating responses in regard to these situations.
Despite the efforts of various UOP officers that continue to disregard and discredit this data to support a much simpler causation of my various situations, UOP has now increased its efforts by harassing me concerning none existing federal loans that are not due until 2017. Despite this, the generic explanations provided by UOP do not appear logically nor logistically appropriate to serve as legitimate explanation. Given the repetitive non-response provided by UOP, I shall again attempt to explain my situation singularly, in specific detail and provide additional questioning as follows:
Leave Of Absence (LOA):As quoted by your (LOA) denial letter, "....on 09/30/09 {I} was denied because it was submitted on an invalid form and requested an absence longer than 90 days, ..." The concern here is that the invalid form was provided by UOP and was filled out via the direct instructions of a UOP representative. Based solely on this information, which can be traced specifically to the day and UOP representative, my question is does UOP engage in actions to intentionally mislead its students? If this is not the case, please provide specific documentation that disproves this statement. Currently UOP expects me to accept that the form that UOP provided and assisted me in filling out was denied because of that fact.
In regard to the Length & Number of Approved Leaves section, I am in complete agreement with the guidelines provided by UOP, especially the following section:"Time in excess of 60 days, not to exceed 90 days per leave in any 12 month period (for a total of 180 days during a 12 month period), may be approved on exception basis unusual circumstances. These circumstances may include, but not limited to, the following issues: military reasons, circumstances covered by the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, or jury duty."
The questions I have here is why was I denied initially when UOP supplied the form for me to fill out and also provided the representative that directly instructed me (via telephone) on how to fill out the application to cover my situation which was departing for the U.S Military? In this case, UOP walked me through step-by-step on how to fill out this form and then denied that very same form. In addition, when the form was accepted, the exact same form was resubmitted with no corrections, yet UOP accepted that. Why is this? What was different of a form that was just refaced and not altered? My final question is why wasn't my military exception granted based upon the fact that I was considered active duty status? What discriminative elements exclude me from the military exception? According to your own policies my situation was considered an exceptional situation, what part of my particular military departure allowed your UOP to discriminate my situation from others?
The break in attendance is very confusing to me and has been a source of tremendous confusion as my attempts to get a concise and definitive answer have failed and have only spawned additional questions as each response is inconsistent from the last. Due to the various contradicting responses, I have received from the UOP on this matter that Raquel ** has placed a censure on any UOP counselor or official from further discussing this issue. According to your research, I returned to school on May 25, 2010 and as a result from this lengthy break in attendance of over 180 days, a new academic year was certified.
My questions are as follows:1. What initiated the exit process? I was told that I was academically disqualified during my LOA, by Stephanie **. In addition, I was told I received a zero for a class for a withdrawal event though I had left for the military prior to the class starting, and UOP received proper advance notice of my situation. Stephanie ** also informed that since I was disqualified, I had to wait 6 months to be readmitted. Which gives us the 2010 May 25 date?
2. If I was academically disqualified, when did UOP provide notice? Who provided the notice? To date, when I ask for a copy of this notice, I am told I cannot get a copy of this notice. Stephanie ** refused to give a copy and forwarded me to a documentation office of the UOP, that later referred me back to Mrs. Stephanie. The act date of this disqualification has also varied.
According to Raquel **, University Relations Lead, Mrs. Stephanie ** provided proper academic advisement during the time in question and had provided properly informed me of the 3.0 requirement for graduation. When I asked Ms. Raquel to clarify how this was determined, I was denied an explanation, nor was Ms. Raquel willing to discuss with me why Mrs. Stephanie decided to conduct the alleged communications, knowing that I was away in the military and unable to respond. Again, when requested to provide proof of the documentation of these communications, I was denied and not provided an explanation as to why.
The actions of Ms. ** and Mrs. ** are discriminative based upon the fact that when my wife presented her situation concerning the alleged 3.0 requirement not only was she granted the opportunity take the additional class to achieve over the 3.0 requirement, but UOP had her do so at no charge as UOP determined that the advisor did not properly provided appropriate counseling in this matter. The only variances in our situations where I was in the military, my wife was not, and she has a J.D.
Since we enrolled simultaneously, took the same MBA program, took the same classes, had the same professors, experienced similar problems with the same professor, and had the same academic advisors, do you feel that you can provide me what the discriminative element was that separated our situations, such that she would be granted the complementary class and I was not? Given the current scenario, the only difference in our situation is that I am serving in the military and she is not, but possesses a J.D.
My next question is why was I not sent to the military liaison department for UOP after acknowledging the fact that I was a military serviceman? Why did Mrs. Stephanie have me pay in order to access this entitled resource? Why did Mrs. Stephanie not acknowledge at this time {March, April, and May 2010} that there was an issue with my graduation in 2010 or 3.0 requirement? Again, please provide documentation to support your position as UOP academic policy does not cover this scenario. Why did Ms. Raquel insist that there were proofs disproving my position yet refused to provide it when requested several times?
In addition, why was I not informed of the alleged Military discounts provided by UOP? Why weren't these discounts provided by the appropriate military liaison? If UOP was aware of me being in the military, how were civilian counselors qualified to handle military personnel?
OPS571Why does UOP refuse to answer my questions pertaining to OPS 571 and the events that transpired with the professor and me? The events that have been documented and verified by Ms. Raquel and Director ** are as follows:
1. The professor acknowledged he would receive Week 2 assignment, late without penalty as it was needed for the Final Assignment.2. After multiple attempts throughout the 6 week course, the professor neglects to respond to various feedback requests about Week 2.
3. The lack of any student response, pertaining to the Week 2 assignment, and its impact on the final assignment.
4. The professor's feedback in week 7, after the class ended, concerning his decision to not grade the Week 2 assignment; and NOT provide the necessary assistance to help me complete the Final Assignment.
5. His blatant threat of reprisal, in email format, if I contested his decision.
According to UOP, an adjustment was provided for OPS 571, according to Carol ** J.D., Director of Academic. She instructed me that she was responsible for the determination of OPS 571 being credited and left instructions for the class to be retaken for free. This did not happen. Although the class was credited, my finance was still charged for it and also I am expected to pay out of pocket in order for UOP to replace the grade with a better one.
In retrospect of the UOP addressing this issue, could you please tell me what methodology was used throughout my academic dispute process? I have been informed by Director **, Director of Academic Affairs that the initial process of the grade dispute is an automatic denial as it primarily deals with incorrect grade inputs by UOP professors only. Given this, the second appeal attempt, allegedly, undergoes a similar process - that being an automatic denial. If this is not the case, you feel that you could provide me a specific accounting of what specific steps were taken, disproving the documentation I provided the Office of Academic Affairs, the Office of Dispute Management, and various UOP officers, consistently showing your professor's acknowledgment of his willingness to accept a weekly assignment late (without point reduction); demonstrating that professor's classroom neglect of a student requesting assistance in order to provide feedback concerning the assignment clarification with classroom assignments; and demonstrating the academic advisement neglect when your professor of OPS 571 waited until week 7, of a six week class duration, to reverse his decision to accept week 2 assignment, dismiss my requests for academic guidance concerning completing the final exam without his feedback from week 2, in an email format, and threaten fabricated reprisal should I contest his actions to UOP officials.
Again, the UOP guidelines are inadequate in providing an explanation for this. In addition, Ms. Raquel refused to provide me clarification of the research conducted and refused to share with me any details. In fact, Ms. Raquel threatened that she would bar any UOP official from speaking with me concerning this matter without explanation. To date, any attempt to contact the UOP concerning any requests in this matter are forwarded to her desk, and she has yet to return any of my calls or requests.
In conclusion, the purpose of this letter is to highlight the response that UOP provided to justify their actions for the events surrounding my situation. Unfortunately, based upon documentation provided by myself and officers of the UOP, this explanation is inadequate at best, and substantitates my claim of misreprentations provided by various UOP officials.
The responses from specific UOP counselors to my situation have been discriminative in nature, as they appear to correlate my military service and obligations as an opportunity to extend usage of my federal educational funds (i.e. Title IV) by extending my attendence at the University through unethical and illegal methods. Again, I have provided specific documentation pertaining to each situation and mentioned here and in my original complaint, originating from data provided by UOP financial and academic officers throughout email correspondence. I am again, requesting either UOP to provide specific information disproving my allegations or as I originally requested, to provide some resolution which addresses the improper actions taken by both UOP professors and counselors in dealing with my academic situation.
Reviewed Aug. 18, 2011
I was informed that I was to receive a refund on my student loan and that I qualified for a Pell Grant. After telling me that it would be deposited into my account, the school applied it to my student loan instead. When I enrolled, I was informed that I could make payments as I so desired, but payments on student loans were not due until six months after I graduate. I am currently in my second year of obtaining an associate’s degree holding an A to A-average. I desperately needed this refund as I have been unemployed for over two years now. These funds would have helped me with school supplies and living expenses. I did not think that Pell Grants were allowed to be kept by the academic institution. I feel betrayed and am angered at the same time by the false information I have been given. What the **, might as well quit. At this point, I am not sure if I’ll even be given my degree—that was probably a lie, too.
Reviewed Aug. 17, 2011
I have a concern on my hands about this harassment problem. Earlier in 2010, University of Phoenix asked me to join their college because I filled out a form from earnmydegree.com. At least 90 times, they kept on calling me and I told them that I don't have any money and I am not working at all. I receive SS which my father gets $293 and I get $200.00 and they still didn't listen. I was professional and I also show mature and appropriate behavior but after being harassed, I didn't know where my head was and I was filling things out like a loan and I warned them that I didn't have the money so I thought it wouldn't be bad to take and try to go for AS degree in technologist then stop.
This resulted with me being hospitalized because of verbal stress from them and from filling out www.fafsa.ed.gov. When I was in the hospital, the social worker send the college a form statement an excuse absence since I was in the hospital. My mother, Jackie, is a proof along with a letter that the social worker send to University with my ID. I want to go to that college but now I can't even get a credit card for little extra things I needed for my daily use.
Reviewed Aug. 17, 2011
I enrolled in class on January 2009 and in December of 2009, the academic counselor enrolled me in Hum 130 and MAT 116 and MAT 117. I had difficulty completing Math 116 and 117 so I spoke with the academic advisor and I told her that I was endanger of failing and she advised that I had to take it over.
Now it's two weeks into the next semester and I spoke with her again and told her to drop those classes because I could I do it last semester. Why do you think I could do it this semester and I also told her that I would take those classes at a campus so I could be in front of a professor because I needed help. This is the end of March 2010.
Phoenix University held me in this class without my knowledge even though I asked to be withdrawn in a timely fashion. They charged me for this and didn't send my loans back until August 2010. Now speaking with the National Education Center in San Francisco, they informed me that Phoenix University was supposed to send my loans back within 90 days of withdrawal and withdrew at the end of March through Jamie of academic advising and Juan of financial aid.
Reviewed Aug. 11, 2011
I was fed the song-and-dance regarding financial aid. I began in March 2010. Got a small financial aid refund in April from private student loans. I was told I would get another refund in June. Every time I spoke with someone (weekly), I checked the status and reiterated that I had four kids to feed and a sick pregnant wife. I was the only income, and I would have to take more hours at work and work less on my schoolwork if I didn't have the supplementary funds. They assured me it was two or three weeks out every time.
Meanwhile, they received two loan disbursements that went straight to the UoP for the classes I had taken and those they anticipated me taking. They held $2000 of my loans for future classes, not releasing the funds to me. They claimed they couldn't, and had to wait on the government to disburse the Pell grant funds to them, first, and they would refund that to me. They also claimed that the government had not yet sent the Pell grant funds to them, which they had requested in March! I can apply at my local college on Aug 1 and have the money in hand on the 23rd. I call **!
During all of these, I couldn't get my financial aid adviser on the phone for anything. He never answered and never returned a call. On the odd occasion, I could get my academic adviser to call my financial adviser but this still didn't get me a call back. Just another vague "I really don't know, but I'll feed you the usual line" answer.
Finally in September, we simply couldn't wait any more. The baby was due at the end of the month and I was offered double hours at work and had to take them in order for me to take the week off when the baby was born (we have no family or anyone else to help with the kids). My school work suffered and I just barely missed the 2.0 I needed in order to be financial aid eligible. UoP insisted I retake the class in late October on my own dime ($1200) or they would charge me for the class. We still hadn't received another dime in Fin Aid in over six months of me taking classes, and there was just no way it was going to happen. I told them all these and tried to explain, but they obviously saw the well was dry and no longer held my hand on anything. The account was turned over to their internal collections within the week. Three days after I told them that I quit, I got the letter saying the Pell grant had come through. How convenient.
Reviewed Aug. 11, 2011
I am a new student at the UOP. I started classes in May. Prior to my starting classes, I was proactive and submitted all my information for financial aid. I actually submitted everything before I started class.
It is now August and I keep getting the runaround. I have been giving four different disbursement dates. The latest statement I submitted everything too early and the system is confused. Really? Is that the best they can do?
I know my money is at the school and it is frustrating for them to play games. I want to transfer but I am not sure how to do it. We (all the students) need to form an alliance and get this problems fixed!
Reviewed Aug. 10, 2011
The University of Phoenix is a joke! I have read all these stories about how they like to stick you. I should have learned when my wife went there. She went to all her classes; she failed the first two. We were told that she would have to pay $830 to continue her classes, and get the other disbursement check, so we did. Now they said that she owes $1,200, and they sent it to collections. We have receipts showing we paid, but they don't care. They are saying that she owes for dropping out of there, and enrolling into another college. They are just upset for her leaving.
Now my turn, I started six weeks ago, and was told that I would get my disbursement in 4-6 weeks. After calling and finding out that my financial counselor does not work there, and being transferred to three different people, I now have to wait 2-3 weeks longer. They have the money there. I am ticked off, and I wish they would get there ** together.
Reviewed Aug. 10, 2011
I applied to this school back in 2004. I was told that I could take online classes to accommodate my full-time work schedule. After enrolling in the online classes, I'm told the class actually meets at a specific time and day, which I was at work during that time. So, I dropped classes because they had me enrolled under false pretenses. I have been going back and forth with them since then because they have a hold on my financial aid.
Reviewed Aug. 9, 2011
I started going to the University of Phoenix in February of 2010 to study IT with a concentration in Web Design. When my first block of classes finished, my classes did not update as they still did not have the option to look at future course available for me online, so I called Paul, my third academic adviser. He advised me that something was wrong but he would manually enter my information in and get me started with the next two courses.
Once the second block of courses was done I have to call him again because the classes were not updating. He told me that he will investigate why but in the mean time, he would manually make the changes again.
Two weeks from the end of my third block of classes, I received a call from Paul saying that they figured what was wrong and it was because they had me under the wrong degree program from the start and that I need to drop the two courses that I am currently taking. He also told me that one of the classes that I took previously, would not be counted toward my IT degree. I was furious but I kept my cool because they agreed that they would pay for my courses and refund me the money to do with as I pleased.
Then I started two new courses only to be told that another two courses that I completed would not count either. I went through the appeals process to have them count. Then in February of 2011 I was one of the lucky ones selected for verification.
I was advised by Leigha, my financial adviser, that they do not select the people to be verified, that the Department of Education does. I faxed in on their letter head the taxes from the previous year as well as a statement saying that we received child support for my step daughter. In March 2011, I received two phone calls, one from my financial adviser and one from the financial aid processing center saying the information was not received, that was after my husband faxed it twice the first time because of previous issue with “missing” faxed documents. Again, I got the information together, but at that point, my daughter no longer lived with us. So the processing center said that it was no big deal that I could just fax in a letter stating that we no longer receive child support. I emailed it that very night.
Well it was not until May that I received an email from Leigha saying that the information was still not received.
I called the processing center and they said that it was received that I needed to write a letter showing how much child support I received and my 2010 taxes needed to have all the boxes filled in. I advised that we filed via TurboTax and that there was no way for me to fill in the boxes unless I have printed and hand filled them. They said that was fine to do. I did it again and sent the email. A few days later I received a call from Leigha saying that they denied my information that I sent because I hand wrote the information, did not initial it and that the letter did not specify how much in child support we receive monthly. Again, I called the processing center and advised them that we did not receive child support any longer and that I did TurboTax. I asked them why if the Federal and the State does not need the boxes filled in, why would they?
I received a response saying that I need to fill out the tax return by downloading a copy from the IRS website, via Adobe, and fax it in. However, I also needed to send a letter stating what child support monies we received in the 2010 aide year. That was in May!
Rewinding a bit, around February I contacted my academic adviser to alert them to the gap in classes that they had me on, I asked them as well whether it would affect my financial aide and after Paul and Leigha talked, they advised me that it would not affect the timing of my aide. Fast forward to July, I started two new classes the first and second weeks of July and they received my loan monies, but still had not processed the Pell Grant stuff. Leigha rushed the information, or so she said, and I was advised that I would receive a response by the end of July and most likely receive my money by first week in August.
By the end of July I still had no update and Leigha said that she would check on it next week. This happened until last week when I contacted the processing center via my academic adviser to find out that Leigha coded my information wrong and nothing was submitted rush, not until July 19, and by that time, they had 11 days to process those requests. After 11 days, which was a Tuesday, August 4, they still have not processed anything. Natasha, the Senior Processing representative emailed me on Friday, August 5 to advise me that the information had been approved for verification however, the funds will be released on September 23 because of the staggering classes that I asked for! I advised her that I did not ask for the staggering classes., I was advised that the classes would be staggered based on the University of Phoenix policy because they did not want students to post in two classes on the same weeks and then homework in both classes the next week.
When I told Natasha that that's not acceptable, she just continued to tell me that there was nothing more that she could do. I politely hung up and called Leigha to advise her of the finding and she said that I should not have a delay for the classes, that they, were looking into it. I received a call from Leigha's manager and was advised that there was nothing that they could do because of the request for staggered classes that I asked for! Again, I advised him that I did not ask for it and I was advised that it would not affect my funding and distribution monies. I asked him if they could release the $2,450 that is sitting on my account for the next two courses and then re-coop their monies on the 23rd of September. They advised that I could not because, "the monies on account are loan monies, and that they are not allowed to release those funds".
After talking with him on the phone, I was pissed off and I hung up on him, knowing that this is getting nowhere. I sent Leigha a message via email saying that I will never recommend the University of Phoenix to anyone and that I will just finish my degree then say goodbye to this institution. I added that I'm glad I don't have to stay longer because University of Phoenix is not something that I can ne proud of.
I sent that email at 12:20pm, August 8 and two hours later at 2:35pm, I received an email from Leigha saying that her manager was able to go further “up the chain” and they can have the credit sent to my account. She advised that I will be receiving an email with a Credit Balance Request form attached and that I need to send it back. She added that the email will be sent by end of that business day and that she was sorry that the re-calculation happened and that she was not able to give accurate information. She said that she also feel terrible yet she is glad there is something that they are able to do for me for the mean time. By 5:48pm, I have not received the Credit Balance form and I emailed Leigha saying that "I believe that it is the end of the business day and I have yet to receive it (the form)."
After that I received a response, that was 6:29pm and it said, "I was told that the processing center was told by end of business today, the processing center should actually send it to you tomorrow." It is now the next day at 3:53pm and I still do not have the form.
Reviewed Aug. 9, 2011
Run, don't just walk away from University of Phoenix! After many phone calls and continued emails, my friend and I decided to enroll in UOP. This was the biggest mistake of our lives. I explained to the enrollment counselor, who used to call me every week to see how I was doing and then one day disappeared, that I was caring for my mother who is 105 years young and my friend explained that he drove a tractor trailer and could not always access a computer.
Well, let's just say that the first several months went along without any problem. Then there came a time to receive funds from our account, I received mine, but for some reason my friend never got his and when he started checking with his financial adviser, he was told that the fund were coming. This went on for two months and every time he called he could not reach his financial adviser. Finally one day he called his academic adviser and was finally told that his financial adviser was no longer with UOP and that his funds were coming. The next thing he knew, he was not responding to his discussion questions and that he was falling behind in his classes.
So, one day I actually watched what he was doing and when he went in, there was only one person listed so he responded to the instructor and replied to one classmate. He left at 3:30am for an assignment and he would be on the road for 4 days so when he returned, he opened his classes and with 28 students in the class, only one more had responded and with his respond that made it three. He responded to his classmate as well. Guess what, he received a call from his academic adviser asking why he hadn't responded in the class and when he told him that there were only two people to respond to and that he did respond, the adviser scolded him and told him that he had to respond. To make the long story short, he still has not received any funds from the school, they placed him on academic probation and told him that he had to pay to retake the class again because they failed him for not participating in his class. I think this is a bunch of ** ** because none of this started until he questioned them about his money. Let me tell you what happened to that.
The financial people told him that it appeared his money had been taken and that they were in the process of investigating the matter because he appeared to be one of many and that one they finalized the investigation they would release their money. Now, that is **. They should have released his money and went after the person or people who was stealing from the students, that is code of ethics.
As for me, I was also put on probation and I was just recently told that I could not take classes again until January. I am old but I am not crazy, I'm sure not anyone's fool.
University of Phoenix is a school that makes their money from students and the federal government. The more they can charge, in any way they can, they will. They will place charges on you that you don't even realize it's coming. They they hold onto your money and give you what they feel you should have. I will say this, before signing up to any school online please check them out completely. UOP is a money maker and scam all rolled into one. You will get a degree but at a huge cost. I figured online would be better for me because I did not want to be a 60+ female sitting in a classroom with a group of youngsters and the time element is attractive, but all in all, I feel that at some age, people really need to consider what is important. My mother is very important and being here if something happens was more important. UOP doesn't care about you or your families or your dreams, their money is their god and that's what's important to them.
Again, I will tell you, run, don't just walk away from University of Phoenix!
Reviewed Aug. 9, 2011
My daughter has been enrolled in the University of Phoenix for two years. She and her two children live with us. I have never seen such a worthless FA department. She qualifies for all financial aid and loans plus Pell Grants. It has now been 1 year since she has any income from that worthless place! It is always the same story day in and day out. It will be in your account tomorrow and guess what, tomorrow never comes! Last week they put the routing number where the account number goes and vice versa. Also she had been waiting for a check for four weeks now and guess what, nothing!
How can this department hire and keep these people? I could go on and on with out experiences but why bother? Nothing ever changes and tomorrow never comes!
Reviewed Aug. 8, 2011
I enrolled in the University of Phoenix in 2003. The student advisor told me the classes were filling fast and that I should get in quickly. She even waived my entrance fee. I was in my 3rd to the last class before receiving my degree when my grandmother passed away and my mom had a heart attack behind the news. I withdrew from my class per university policy, and I contacted the student advisor as well as the teacher to let them know as much, and I thought I was in the clear. I never received any more mail from the school.
Last year in 2010, I was going over my credit report and I noticed that the University of Phoenix had me owing them over $2000. I thought it was a mistake so I did not look into it right away. Three weeks later, I decided to return for my degree since I only had a couple of classes left. That was when I found out that they not only had not withdrawn me from my class but charged me for the next two classes as well. I called the grievance office and the guy was very rude and pretty much called me a liar, so I hung up and let it go for several months.
In April of this year, I decided to enroll at Colorado Technical University online where I am now attending. When they tried to get my transcripts, the University of Phoenix refused. I filed a grievance with their grievance office this time to get this taken care of and I just received their response in the mail. It did not address my issue at all which was me paying for classes I never took, instead they belittled me by explaining why the FASFA loan was returned and did not pay for the classes (that I never took) and so it was my responsibility. I am now looking at having to take 90 credit hours at Colorado Technical University online to get my degree and go another $26,000 in student loans in the hole as well as have a bad credit rating and an awful GPA due to the negligence of their staff. I just discovered that this was also during the time that the federal government filed a law suit against the school for academic fraud with their student and financial advisors for this sort of thing.
So, unless I take these people to court, my only recourse is to pay them and then pay for the classes all over again or stay where I am and rack up $26,000 in student loans to get the same degree.
Reviewed Aug. 3, 2011
Well, University of Phoenix likes to hold on to student loans. It has been a financial nightmare with this college. They have removed my military discount on several occasions. I have had to fight with the financial department to get them to do anything.
Reviewed Aug. 3, 2011
I started UoP-Axia College (online school) on 12/08. At first, everything was great. I did not really start having too many problems until this past year. It all started when I filled out last year's FAFSA. My parents had finally been released from their bankruptcy and ended up getting approved for a Plus loan. My parents did not want it taken out but the school did that anyway, and I made up the difference with federal student loans. An individual at the school messed up and had my federal loans assigned as unsubsidized instead of subsidized. Instead of catching this problem in a timely manner, it went on through a disbursement and until June of this year; When my financial advisor changed and then I got a phone call saying that I had been over awarded on my financial aid and the school was sending $2000 back to my lender.
I told them that was unacceptable and that they needed to fix it and make it right. The school told me that they can not fix it otherwise, they will lose the ability to offer student loans. Well, I called my lender yesterday to find out if there is anything that I can do. They told me that so far, they have only received one thousand. Now I know this does not seem like a big problem, but I am getting told that I have to come up with almost a thousand dollars so that I can take the last class I need for my degree.
I called my financial aid advisor as well as the processing center to find out what happened to that other thousand dollars and I got two different stories. My advisor told me that it was canceled (not possible due to the fact that they had the check (one check) since at least march) and the processing center telling me that they do not know what happened to it. After having 51 credits for an accounting degree and having learned about the SEC, FASB, GAAP and fallouts of scandals, this got me thinking. After reading everything on here, I think that school needs to be audited for some kind of fierce.
Now, I own up to the fact that in almost three years at this school; I have failed two classes due to the fact of moving, dealing with internet losses and plain disillusionment with the establishment. Now that they have messed up my financial aid so much, I will not be able to come up with the money that I need to take my last class for my degree. I am unemployed, I have not worked in almost five years and my boyfriend and I live almost paycheck to paycheck. I do not have the ability to come up with a thousand dollar. Had the school not messed up with my financial aid, I would not be in this situation because I would have the funds to pay for the class.
Reviewed Aug. 2, 2011
My daughter is on her 2nd year of online schooling. She has never received her money ever on time, they have excuses for each time. It has now been a year since her last deposit. June 10 was to be her next deposit and it is now Aug 2 and nothing yet, each time there is a reason.
She and her two children live with us and I am disabled and we have to support them as well as ourselves. I can not understand how this university can keep doing this not only to my daughter but as well as to other students.
Reviewed July 29, 2011
I was involved in a head on collision and was not able to return to school for this reason. I sent a letter to redraw from my classes I attended and future classes, to my advisor and teachers. I had previously redrew from one of my classes because of personal situation. The teacher let me withdraw and the other gave me a F, noting this is after I was involved in a wreck, heavily medicated and probably out of it, which made my GPA a 2.0. Mind you, I have been making As, Bs and around the wreck time ended with a Cs.
Reviewed July 29, 2011
I am disturbed by the nature of complaints posted on your site regarding the University of Phoenix (UOP). These are very petty complaints and are issues that one deals with at every university. I think the reality is that these individuals believed the misperceptions about UOP and thought they would be handed a degree. Newsflash!!! I attended UOP and loved the education I received. I worked long hours, late nights and earned my degree. My suggestion to those who have complaints is that obviously this university is not for you, so maybe you should go to the traditional college in your area. Don't be surprised however if you find the same issues you are wining about. Get over it!!!
Reviewed July 26, 2011
They are not disbursing checks as suppose to. I am following their attendance rules and regulations, and they will not even release my transcript either. They have been giving everyone the runaround about monies that are supposed to have been disbursed to their students.
Reviewed July 25, 2011
Well, this is not a complaint but a compliment.
University of Phoenix has been a significant change in my life. Some years ago, I was at a college fair and University of Phoenix gave such a good impression, it stuck in my mind for three years. While I was still attending junior college, I had decided to transfer to UCSB, located in Goleta of California. Because I work full-time, and had two underage children at that time, I pondered on University of Phoenix, then after some considerable thinking, I contacted the first person (Lori), a wonderful enrollment counselor.
My major is Health Care Administration, and I am almost finished earning my Bachelor's degree. If any questions came along about my financial aid, Pell grant and other financial questions as such, I always called and spoke directly to my financial counselors. There has been a change of financial counselors along the way. My learning experience is more than wonderful. University of Phoenix has helped in the area of self-confidence, enhancements in literature, and more ability to grasp concepts in this online learning environment. I am sorry if anyone feeling otherwise has had negative experiences with this university. Much of what I am reading has to do with people dropping out for hardship circumstances and having a negative financial obligations reflecting on their credit. And, for the complaint about the loss of home, and other hardships; the university in no wise are responsible for those losses, though unfortunate ones. These are difficult times, and our economy is staggering to its feet.
The policy for students taking emergency time off has changed. But any student needing to take personal time off should review the policy for that, before attending your first class. I have been going for three and a half long years with online studies. Sometimes I want to quit. I took care of my mother and I took almost two months off from work, plus had school, and my children now ages 20 years and 16 years.
I refer anybody to University of Phoenix. I have often thought of becoming a faculty member, too. All things will work out if you plan your goals ahead and work with and not against the school.
Saundra **
Reviewed July 18, 2011
I attended the University Of Phoenix in 2010, my overall experience was horrible. My fianance advisor took 4 months to set up my finacial aid, claiming that someone other than her was at fault. I personally called the finacial aid department and was told by them that they had done everything they needed to do and that it was up to the schools finacial advisor to continue the process. I spoke with them several times. When i would call and was able to get ahold of my finacial advisor, she would blame it on them.
Finally i spoke with my advisors supervisor several times and after four months resolved the issue at the schools end. Nine times out of ten when i tried to contact her or anyone else on the matter i got their voice mail, and most of the time never recieved a call back from them. The instructors were very unhelpful as well. As a result of my finacial advisor messing up my finacial aid i was not able to continue online classes, as i was waiting on it to come through to help pay my rent, internet service and pay for a computer.
Now I am able to go back to classes and continue my education but, the University of Phoenix is holding my transcripts and will not release them to another college, because they are charging me for classes that i had to drop out of as a result of the matter with the finacial aid. I have tried several times to contact the advisor at the University of Phoenix and left messages just recently, with no reponse back from them.
Reviewed July 13, 2011
After notifying the University's management about the enrollment advisor's fraud of the Federal Student Aid forms I was subject to threats of a Student Code of Conduct violation. The enrollment advisor at the University instructed a prospective student to falsify his financial aid application to reflect he signed up for selective services when he did not. This would render him ineligible for aid but the enrollment advisor, knowing this, told him to mark yes. After I informed her of his bragging about what she did she went and had him rejected for enrollment and the cover up began. Now I am being harassed and threatened by the University.
Reviewed July 8, 2011
The school got paid for my classes during the first week of April 2011. My portion was due to be dispersed shortly after. It is now the middle of July and I still not have received my Pell grant. My portion was on-hold for re-calculations and administrative holds, for no reason. I was told on yesterday by Randy, one of the administrators, that it is a glitch in the system on one of their AE screens that holds the money and will not release it. I made a suggestion to get the computer program fixed. I explained to him once again, just like all the others I had spoken to, how unfair and hard it is for me, attending school without these resources.
I feel that the school has gotten their money and they do not care that they receive money to help me. Everyone at the school has made promises to me to try and override the senseless hold to my account, but to no avail. As of today, still nothing has been done. I am supposed to start a new class next week and that means that the school will need to pay for that class out of money that's being held. I wonder how they will manage that when they can't give me my money. Funny, huh? I have called and tried to get phone numbers to people in-charge to no avail. I have sent each of them e-mails and requests to release the hold. Is it going somewhere?
Reviewed July 5, 2011
I had to stop school because of the death of my father. I called the school to let them know and they said that I couldn't take any time because it was in the middle of final exams. They were sorry for my lost but nothing could be done. So I stopped enrolling in any classes. After that, I got some papers in the mail saying that the money I was to get was returned to the lender, and the school sent another letter saying that I owe them $880 for the classes that were not paid for. But the money was sent back.
Reviewed July 2, 2011
I was approved for financial and student loans and was not sent Pell grant money! The institution stated that my loans were still being processed and would receive the balance after 90 days. Realizing something wasn't right and my son staying with me requires more money, I investigated further.
A Carol ** stated the prior reason for delaying my funds coming to me was due to a clerical error and the Pasadena branch of University of Phoenix neglected to inform the financial services that I was requiring more loans! So, the university is holding the money that arrived at University of Phoenix. The Pell grant arrived at University of Phoenix on June 10, 2011.
This was not a flaw in my procedure but a tragic mistake by the university where I paid so much money to already. In the meantime, I am struggling to put food on the table.
Reviewed June 21, 2011
I was a student in 2001. I was told that I did not qualify for a Pell Grant even though I was a displaced worker (I was laid off, over 40 & the custodial parent of 2 boys). I applied for and was granted a Stafford Loan. I returned to work later that year but kept up my studies. In September I informed my advisor that I would be unable to take any classes in November or December because of work, per UOP policy.
My Stafford loan is paid off, however, now 10 years later, my account is on hold because UOP records indicate that I have a balance. I have been trying to rectify this but keep getting transferred from department to department, to supervisor to disconnection. Now it seems that their records show that I either did not pass a class or I withdrew from the class (depending on whom you talk to). This process has been very frustrating for me.
I feel as if the UOP is giving me the runaround hoping that I will drop the matter. This is not going to happen. Please help. Oh, I almost forgot, the last department I spoke with, Collections Science cannot find a file with my name, ss# and IRN. There are 2 others with the same name but different ss# & IRN.
Reviewed June 11, 2011
I deleted and "unsubscribed" from the "website" and e-mails. I have received repeated e-mails. I’m guessing this won't stop the "scamming" this "site" is allowed. This has caused multiple complications. I will have an independent firm trace and isolate the "worms" attached to my "secure" address which this university ignored my "un-subscription" status.
Reviewed June 10, 2011
After speaking in great lengths over a period of days with Kara, the enrollment advisor, I was informed that it would cost me approximately $3,800 after financial aid to attend and complete my associates degree. Then after 3 days of class, I get a call from Brett saying it will cost me about $12,000 after any financial aid to complete my associates degree.
I think it is funny how they do nothing with your financial aid until you have started your classes. I believe they do this to stick it to you. I told him he was crazy that I had asked Kara several times and she told me every time the same thing, "it would cost me about $3,800 for my associated degree, that included tuition and books", not $12,000! So now I'm getting a bill to cover the 3 days of school.
Reviewed June 1, 2011
My wife called UOP to inquire about attendance. She was told that with life credits, she could graduate from an accelerated program in maybe just over two years. She was excited and enrolled. After taking a test, she received almost no applicable credits after retiring from a successful career. She was forced to attend classes (online) 12 months a year with absolutely no breaks. Only a couple of times was she allowed to take a week or two break between classes, and that had to be approved. After close to 4.5 years with only about a total 3 weeks of approved breaks between classes, she finally graduated.
We just received loan statements from both CitiBank and FedLoans totaling $49,000.00 for a B.S. degree! How could an online school cost so much? There are no classrooms, air conditioning and light bills, etc., as overhead. Her loans include 6 unsubsidized and 6 subsidized loans. She applied for, but received absolutely no financial aid, other than loans which were sold to CitiBank and FedLoans Student Loan Corporation. These loans have been traded between financial institutions on multiple occasions. We have no idea if there is some other institution out there with other loans. We only hope that the loans between CitiBank and FedLoans are the only ones.
I feel that my wife was very misled. I figured the high end cost might total around $30,000. I was recently shocked to learn the price tag for an online B.S. was $50,000. We will pay the loans off in full this month, but would caution everyone to get everything in writing as they are masters at confusion with those who focus solely on a degree and are unaware of the business of education as in my wife's case.
My niece graduated from a private school, had summers off, lived and ate on campus, and graduated with a B.S. with a student loan under 35,000. How could UOP have cost $49,000.00 for a B.S.? My wife had always wanted to get an education. It's the only thing that she ever really asked for and the one thing I always wanted to be able to support her in. We honestly did not realize the price.
Credit Card companies have to disclose every charge, interest, etc. in a monthly statement. We didn't even know until recently, who we owed, how much we owed, amount of interest being accumulated, etc. How are they getting away with this? I'm sure there are those who will comment that we got what we deserved by not paying attention. In hindsight, my only response to that would probably have to be, maybe we do.
Reviewed April 25, 2011
On 4/25/2011, I was notified by Kendra that a class I took in 2007 was not going to be counted and the 3 credits I earned would be removed. I took BSHS/342 Human Lifespan Development from 11/20/2007-12/24/2007 and passed the class. Unfortunately, Kendra scheduled me a class in 2011 that was similar to the class I took in 2007. On 2/08/2011, I was enrolled in PSY/375 Life Span Human Development which I took and passed. Due to the error on Kendra's behalf, 3 credits have been removed from me and I am being forced to take an additional class.
Kendra emailed, "I completely understand Christina and trust me, I did everything I could to try and have that course applied to your electives especially since it was an error made with the scheduling system. I was denied and told there was nothing I could do and I even escalated it to a director that I thought could. Honestly, I do and have valued your time. In the 7 years I have worked here, I have never experienced something like this". I would like to know how this is a legal practice when it is the fault of the school. Please help!
Reviewed March 2, 2011
Two major issues: First, I took a GEN 105 course for my associates. This was basically a course teaching you how to take online schooling at UOP, find the location of everything including resources, etc. Very overpriced and should be optional, but I did it anyways without complaint and received an A. Well I continued at UOP and actually enjoyed it, and received my Associates Degree. When I started my Bachelor's Program, they told me I would be mandated to take GEN 200. Though it was named different than the GEN 105 course, it was basically the same exact material! They wanted me to take this course for the high price of regular courses.
All this course is doing is reiterating what I learned already in GEN 105 and got an A in! I am surprised there is not a class action lawsuit demanding money back for this course as it is clearly a scam to profit at no educational benefit to the student whatsoever. It absolutely should not be mandated once you have already took the GEN 105. They told me I had to take it in order to proceed and when I told them how much of a scam I thought that was to profit, they said they understood but could do nothing to change it.
Second major issue: Learning teams! What a joke. Please consider this argument. I am a busy mommy who was drawn to UOP online courses for the convenience they offer. Though I realize I pay a higher price for this convenience, at this time it is the only way for me to attend college right now with a family, starting a job, and other obligations. So I am told when I start my Bachelor's Degree that I would be in Learning Teams. At first I thought a couple of courses this would be applied which I can appreciate, because in life we all need to learn how to work as a team. But it is mandated to remain in Learning Teams for the entire duration of your Bachelor's Degree! And it is horrible! The obvious argument is the major contradiction of offering a student the ability to create his/her own schedule. This takes that away almost completely.
It also requires each person trying to figure out what part to do, agree on it, communicate for days making sure everyone is on the same page and delegate assignments, then everyone does their part and someone writes it all. Then it is posted for review by person writing it and then that person has to wait for each team member to approve or ask for it to be revised. There are deadlines to turn in your part well before assignment is due because the one person who has to write it needs time for review, and all the while it takes half the time and battle just coordinating with everyone. It is not like we are in a face-to-face environment, they expect us to coordinate this online. It is angering. Then ready for the worst part of all? There are sometimes two Learning Team assignments per week and an individual assignment for you to complete.
Say you completed your part of the Learning Team assignment, well if the paper is bad because other team members won't revise their part, your grade suffers. Yes, you who may be an A B student, as I am, will have to rely on the team assignments to factor in for your grade. What ** at UOP thought of and approved this? It contradicts the very nature of their program being helpful to busy families. I am currently looking to exit out of there and re-enroll elsewhere as soon as possible. I am very upset because I really wanted a degree from there. Alas, there is another insulting and annoying, more time-consuming rule they added recently.
Because the UOP wants to treat us like children and make us pay for the ** who plagiarize, we must sign a certificate of originality document and add it to each assignment stating it is our original work. Seriously, is it not grade school learning that we should not plagiarize. Can we not just agree to it initially and if caught doing so be expelled? Must we add yet another pain in the **, time-consuming thing to do to make it even more inconvenient to attend? It all adds up to time. And to them, they see dollar signs it is clear. I am so upset because I now have to take time to investigate other schools, their program, what transfers, how much, etc. Also, the financial aid center holds on to funds for a long duration with excuse after excuse of why it has not been credited to you and disbursed. It is another awful and time-consuming pain in the neck to contact them asking them to explain where your funds are. At this point I am wondering if they do not invest it somewhere for a profit and keep it as long as they can to do so.
Reviewed Feb. 25, 2011
In the spring of 2005, I inquired on a University of Phoenix website (Western International University) for some info about the possibility of attending online school. I was phoned immediately and pressured to attend ASAP. I had many misgivings, because at the time, I was suffering from seizures from Systemic Lupus, and I was taking tons of meds. My ability to concentrate was awful, and I hadn't been in school for over 30 years and I only had my GED. I was and still on SSI for permanent disability, which I also made clear to the recruiter.
The recruiter assured me that I had nothing to lose and that if I have any problems, I could simply stop taking classes. He also said that I was on a trial basis and that the school would also help me with any special assistance due to my individual concentration problems. One of my main concerns was that there were no actual books available for the classes, only "online" books. And I told him that I need to hold the books in my hands to reinforce what I need to learn and that with my seizures, it's difficult to read from a monitor. He "assured me" that I could get actual books, and it wouldn't be a problem. And when he found out who I need to talk to about my special needs, he would do everything necessary to help me. He said, "He would stake his job on it."
The last time I spoke to him was the day before the disability counselor emailed me and told me that there was no "special assistance that they could give me, and it was too late to drop out without penalties."
He did whatever he needed to do to "rush my FAFSA" through. I was in class within a week from his initial phone call. He was very persistent. I floundered for a few weeks, and he said that he was constantly having meetings with his superiors to "make them keep their word." They never did, and the individual who I was working with just disappeared one day. They told me that he was fired for making promises that he wasn't authorized to give me. They were demanding that I pay the remainder of the fees (after what they already kept from the FAFSA that they took) and were also demanding that I pay them $448.52.
I am disputing that I owe them anything, because their recruiter told me that I wouldn't owe anything. They fired him for lying, and that proves that I was offered these classes under false pretenses. I am joining this class action lawsuit against Phoenix University and their companies, along with the many other people that have had similar experiences. Thank you. Ellen **
Reviewed Jan. 22, 2011
I received my associate's degree at University of Phoenix. Other than a few illiterate women professors they employ there, I was pretty happy with the way the learning was set up. Now I am in the BS program, and I am told I have to be a part of "learning teams" for the entire duration of my degree. Though, I didn't like the sound of being dependent on other students for a portion of my grade, nor taking away from doing the work myself, they assured me it would be a wonderful experience that is beneficial to my future. I do not see how. I am a course and have to wait on the other team members to determine who does what part of an assignment. There are already disagreements and some who lack in participation as they should. I went ahead and volunteered for the portion of the assignment I wanted to do immediately, completed it, submitted it, and then some member goes and takes it upon himself to make a chart and assign me to an entirely different part. It is a joke. I could see one or two courses like this but this is seriously a joke.
I am not getting any benefit from learning teams, online learning are specifically so we can learn and study at our own pace provided we turn work in on time, not wait on others! Then, whoever is in charge of putting everyone's part together has to be counted on to do APA, proper grammar, spelling, and now they added an attachment that insults our integrity called a certificate of originality that we must submit with any assignment stating we swear it is our original work. Another added step that is unfair for honest people we already learned in grade school that plagiarism is wrong. They warned us and made us sign an acknowledgment that we would not cheat, and now they make us add this too? I can get over that but it seems it is just one thing after the other.
I am looking into other online schools and I am mad that I have to go through all this trouble. I want to do my own work and have my grade reflect my work not mine and some strangers on a team I won't see or be in class with again necessarily. I am so disappointed that they manage these learning teams I have a feeling that eventually they will see how they make online learning more inconvenient for people and hopefully remove them. If they do not remove them now, I am leaving to another online University. I hope I find a reputable one I am looking into Capella, I just need to ensure they are reputable and accredited which I believe they are. I have also had many issues with the financial aid department disbursing my funds when they say, I have been waiting on my excess loan money and courses to be paid for weeks now when told it would be expedited, I called and she had only "expedited" it a week after she told me she would. It's a sham because I really do not want to leave UOP, I like the courses just not the learning teams. Beware of them they are forcing you to wait for others before you can even know what you are doing and it becomes a confrontational pain in the butt which also takes away from you doing all of your own work and your GPA can go down because of other people. So not fair.
Reviewed Jan. 21, 2011
I am writing to express my displeasure and frustration at the enrollment strategy of University of Phoenix as being misleading and deceptive. Throughout a year and a half, I discussed the Continuing Education program with three different enrollment counselors and Ms. Lindsay **. At no time did anyone express the limitations of what the University could award, or state that I needed to enroll in a different program to obtain an administrative endorsement. Unlike other online universities, who are truthful in the initial enrollment calls and clearly state the limitations of their programs, University of Phoenix gives responses designed to entice the student rather than help the prospective student make informed decisions.
In January of 2009, I enrolled in the University of Phoenix's Continuing Education program's Educational Leadership classes in order to complete my Masters plus 30 degree. At the time, I spoke with enrollment counselor Eric ** about whether or not the university offered the continuing education courses as a way of earning an Administrative Endorsement in the state of Tennessee. During several phone conversations, Mr. ** repeatedly stated that the continuing education courses have been appropriate for teachers to earn licensure add-ons or endorsements. He did state that it is dependent upon each individual state and that I should verify the requirements with my home state. Additionally, in recent emails and phone calls with Ms. Lindsay **, she also stated that the continuing education courses could be used for licensure or endorsements.
I verified in July and then again in December with the State of Tennessee that they would accept courses from the University of Phoenix for endorsements and that I did not need to pursue a separate Masters Degree. With that, I enrolled in two courses in the spring of 2009. Later, I re-enrolled in the summer of 2010. I spoke with enrollment counselor Tara ** about continuing with the University to earn my endorsement. Like Mr. **, Ms. ** stated that the Continuing Education courses could be used for endorsements. Lewis ** echoed this statement after enrolling in courses. At no time did any of these people ask what was required by the State of Tennessee, ask to see my paperwork, or say that there were limitations to what the university could do. Their responses to my questions were always that the courses could be used for endorsements. Additionally, they never indicated that the University had a separate program for those seeking licensure. In fact, little direction was given by your enrollment counselors.
Throughout the process, I continued to check with the Department of Education in Tennessee. The State verified that the courses offered by the University of Phoenix were approved and all that was needed was for the University to complete the paperwork for the State. Once I completed the courses, I was informed by Ms. ** and Mr. ** that the University would not complete the necessary paperwork due to the phrasing Program Completed on the state's licensure forms. After continual reassurance and several thousand dollars spent, I am unable to complete the endorsement due to the university's misleading information.
Several months ago, I sent a similar complaint and have been in communication with Lindsay ** in the Dispute Management Office. Throughout the process, there has been continual misunderstanding about what I was seeking to earn and what my complaints have been. Additionally, her communications with the Department of Education have been misinformed and have failed to address my concerns. Ms. ** repeatedly stated that the problem with recommending the endorsement was not the university's courses, but the wording of the State's paperwork. She also sent several emails stating that the problems I was having was that I did not understand which paperwork I needed or even what the state required. I have several emails from both the State and Ms. ** verifying that I only needed to seek an endorsement and that I was correct in the paperwork that I sent Ms. **.
At the end of the process, I was sent an email stating that Tennessee required me to be enrolled in a certified endorsement program. Being fully aware of this requirement, I repeatedly asked Ms. **, Mr. **, Ms. **, and Mr. ** if the courses in the Continuing Education program were for an endorsement program. They all stated that they were and are now, still refusing to make the recommendation for endorsement. I have sent Ms. ** several emails asking specifically about what I had been told by the state and she has yet to respond.
Please understand I am unhappy that the university was unable to complete the necessary paperwork. The counselors should have been more forthcoming about what the university could and could not do, as well as of their licensure programs. If it is incumbent upon the student to find out what the state requires, then the university should honor those requirements. Or, at a minimum, they should ask for the necessary paperwork prior to enrolling students. It appears that the university is more interested in gaining students than actually helping those students reach their educational goals.
Reviewed Dec. 30, 2010
I have proof that the University of Phoenix engages in illegal practices and I will give every dime I own (I own a lot of dimes)to bring them down. I have been lied to since the day I enrolled in the University of Phoenix and I am not a happy camper. The first lie I was told was commencement would be held in my city and state when the time would come for me to graduate and that was a lie. I later learned that my family and I wanted to participate in commencement I would have to travel 9 hours away. What the ***?
The second lie I was told was regarding my financial aid. I was told that it would take 60 days for the school to receive my aid once I posted attendance for the first class, and to my surprise four days after, I started the school credited my account with my student loans and Pell Grant. This made me wonder whether or not, the school had already had my money and was just holding on to it, using it however they pleased. Although this was great news for me since that meant, I would be getting my refund sooner than expected but the problem came in when it was time for my next disbursement. This time it took more than 60 days for them to credit my account, and when I asked why they couldn't credit my account like they did the first time no one could provide me with an accurate response.
The third lie I was told was I had to have a GED or high school diploma to attend, which was the law and the department of education's rules. But why is it they accepted me having neither? Now, I know they are 100% funded through tuition fees, but my gosh they are that desperate for money. I'm not putting myself down, but I could have had an 6th grade education and they would have accepted me, just as long as my EFC was zero increasing my chances of financial aid assistance.
The third lie I was told was in order for me to remain a student I had to allow them to charge me for future fees, even if they were not in the same billing period, but according to the department of education, I have a right to decide whether or not they can hold my financial aid for future fees. The only fees they are allowed to bill me for are current outstanding charges, not future, but the University of Phoenix has tried to get slick by billing your account for future courses so they can hold your financial aid. This is against the law if you have opted to not allow them to hold your funds.
The fourth lie I was told was incoming credits are automatically posted to your account summary page and an actual human does not encode the incoming credits. This is a lie. The University actually can request funds from the department of education once you have been approved, and an actual human does have to go in and give you credit so it can reflect on your account summary page. So if you have your Loan Disclosure statements stating you should receive credit on a certain date and you do not receive that credit, it is an actual human's fault at the University and is not the auto-bot's fault.
The fifth lie I was told was per request, and once approved for my financial aid a manager could give me a provisional credit on my account, allowing the refund to be issued so I could get the items I need (computer, etc), but when the time came no one was willing to do this. It's like I was told what I wanted to hear so I could be reeled in, but once I started they didn't care about my needs anymore.
The sixth lie was although the school sets a limit on the cost of attendance for all students, they do have the ability to look at each student's individual situation, and make adjustments to that cost. Being that the school is online and people from all areas of the world have the ability to attend each student's cost of attendance is not the same. The cost of living where I live is higher than in Mississippi. So, why would the school grant me the same amount of money as someone living in Mississippi when my room-and-board is higher?
The worse lie that I was told violates my right as a disabled individual. I was told that accommodations could be made because of my disability and the school has failed to accommodate me. In fact they told me that I was not disabled, although I have been declared disabled by my doctors and receive social security because of my disability. The list goes on and on and yesterday I gave my case to an attorney who was more than happy to take the case once he saw all the facts I have created. This school should not be accredited and should not be in business. Like I said, I am willing to do whatever it takes to expose them.
Reviewed Dec. 23, 2010
I have been going to UOP since 03/09 and never ran into any problems until the end of 09. Since I have been enrolled with UOP, I have had three academic counselors and one Financial Aid advisor which never return my calls but is quickly to respond to my emails. I have had problems with my financial aid since day one.
I was told by Paula ** which is my Financial Aid Advisor that I would be receiving my Pell grant disbursement before I started my courses that I am currently taking now and I have gotten nothing but the run around by her and the processing center. I have spoken with the processing center many times and all I have gotten was excuses and stories (lies).
I have faxed all required documents and still nothing. I called last night and spoke with Sandy in the processing center and she stated that I was not going to be receiving my Pell grants. I don't understand and really don't know which way to turn or go. If there is someone out there that can help me out in regards to this please let me know. Thanks.
Reviewed Dec. 21, 2010
I see all of these complaints about UoP and wonder why? Why is everyone so confused that a "for profit" school works so hard to get you signed up with Federal Loans/Grants and then expects you to pay? I graduated from UoP and yes I did have issues and would never recommend them but I went in with my eyes open.
When all is said and done once you start a class you have to pay for it. Their business model is about getting students and they abuse the Federal loan systems. Without these loans (I think like 85% of all students are getting loans) this school would have a hard time existing. This is why the counselors make everything sound so wonderful to get you excited about enrolling. Read all of the complaint boards and "Buyer Beware. " Go in with your eyes open or don't go in. UoP doesn't try to hide any of this but with so many people desperate to get a degree the list of potential students is very long. As long as the governments keeps loaning money, UoP will have a never ending stream of students.
Reviewed Dec. 21, 2010
I see all of these complaints about UoP and wonder why. Why is everyone so confused that a "for profit" school works so hard to get you signed up with Federal loans/grants and then expects you to pay? I graduated from UoP and yes, I did have issues and would never recommend them but I went in with my eyes open.
When all is said and done, once you start a class you have to pay for it. Their business model is about getting students and they abuse the Federal loan systems.
Without these loans (I think like 85% of all students are getting loans), this school would have a hard time existing. This is why the counselors make everything sound so wonderful to get you excited about enrolling. Read all of the complaint boards and "Buyer Beware." Go in with your eyes open or don't go in. UoP doesn't try to hide any of this but with so many people desperate to get a degree, the list of potential students is very long. As long as the government keeps loaning money, UoP will have a never ending stream of students.
Reviewed Dec. 21, 2010
I was attending University of Phoenix online through Richmond, VA Campus from March 2010 until December 2010. I received my first disbursement for my Pell Grant in a timely manner and I was told I should see my second disbursement of $2775.00 in August 2010. In August 2010, I failed to receive my second disbursement so I contacted my financial advisor and he told me that I needed to reapply for 2010-2011 year. I did the online application and submitted it, contacted my financial advisor 48 hours later to check to see if he received my application and he confirmed he did and said I should expect my disbursement around the middle of September 2010. This time came and I still had not seen my disbursement so I contacted my financial advisor and he said they are running behind processing the Pell Grant and I should see it in 2-3 weeks.
I waited until the middle of October 2010 and still failed to receive my disbursement and once again, I contacted my financial advisor. Once again, he said it should be 2-3 weeks and if I did an automatic deposit, it should be quicker than that so I followed his instruction to have a direct deposit of my disbursement instead of being mailed to me. During this time, I decided to drop from UoP at the end of the semester, which was December 12, 2010, and begin with a new college that was local the following semester. I waited until November 14, 2010 before I contacted John **** once again. I explained to him about my withdrawal in concern that it may further hold up my disbursement and he told me it should not since it was approved up to December 6, 2010 and my withdrawal date was on the 12th and according to his computer that it was being processed and should be 14 days since they were running behind before I received my funds. I asked to speak to someone else about this matter and he gave me what is called the University Finance Department’s phone number ****.
Therefore, I called the number and spoke with a young woman there and she checked her records and said the same thing John **** did that there is no problem with my withdrawal and my Pell Grant disbursement. She also said according to her notes that my funds were currently being processed and it takes 3-5 business days for approval and up to 14 business days to be deposited into my bank account. I once again waited until December 6, 2010 and did not see my funds deposited so I checked my academic account and it was showing a zero balance owed and no future classes scheduled and a $2775.00 credit. I then contacted Mr. **** and he was surprised that it was in my academic account and did not have a reason for it and said he will check into it and get back with me.
After hanging up with Mr. ****, I contacted the University's Financial Department about this matter and they admitted that it was an error but since it was in the academic department’s account ,there is nothing more they can do about it. On December 7, 2010, I left Mr. **** a message telling him about the information I received from the University's Finance Department. Mr. **** returned my phone call on December 9, 2010 with information that he submitted a ticket with ticket number **** to release my funds from my academic account to my bank account and it should be about 2 weeks for the funds to be released and deposited into my bank account since they were running behind.
On December 15, 2010, I received this e-mail from the University's Finance Department with IRN: ****.
“Good Afternoon, Cletis, Your file was submitted to the research department to determine when your disbursements will be released. Your file is in the process of being researched. At this time, your campus is aware of the issue and working with the processing center to resolve. For further disbursement inquiries, please follow up with your campus. Thank you and have a Great Day!Denice, **** ****. Phone: **** Fax: **** Email: ****.
I did not understand what it meant so I forwarded to John **** and asked him to please explain it to me. John **** contacted me by phone and said he had no idea what it meant. He has never heard of a research department before and suggested that I contact Denice **** for further information on it. I then once again contacted the number provided on the e-mail and asked to speak to Ms. Denice **** and a gentleman by the name of Joe informed me that they were unable to transfer calls. Therefore, I explained the situation and expressed my aggravation to him about this matter and all he could tell me since the campus submitted the fund release ticket, it is out of their hands and I must contact my campus financial advisor on this matter. I asked to speak with his supervisor and he put on the phone who he called his coach. According to coach, since I never did get his name, that he was reviewing my notes and does not understand what the e-mail meant, it was out of their hands, and I must contact my campus finance department.
So once again, I called John **** and left him a message, explaining to him what they said, and expressing my aggravation. I also e-mailed the lady that generated the e-mail and explained to her what was going on and asked her to please contact me by e-mail or phone and explain to me what the e-mail meant since she was the one that wrote it, she would know what it meant. It is now December 20, 2010 and I have had no further contact from the University of Phoenix on this matter. I do have copies of all email correspondences about this matter. Unfortunately, I did not record any phone conversations.
Reviewed Dec. 19, 2010
I withdrew from University of Phoenix because of an illness and I was unhappy with their online math classes. I carried a 3.8 gpa until math. The classes consisted of massive reading and trying to figure out the problems on your own. The instructors provided limited help. Every math class I took I flunked. Every other class I received A's and B's. Now as I withdrew I was assured by my academic counselor that everything was fine and I that all of the proper paper work was completed.
About six month later I enrolled with Kaplan when I sent out for my credits UOP said I owe them over $6000. The financial counselor gave me some story about not meeting requirements and that they tried to contact me which was a lie. I went back and forth with the finical person and he just stop responding to my emails and know one in financial aid will help me. I ask to speak to the manger in charge and I never got a response. I have 63 credits they will not transfer and now I owe $6000.
Well, I need some help here because I want my credits. I took out loan and grant money to attend this college and I had to basically start my fourth year of college over at Kaplan with no credits. Do you know how much money I will owe in loans just to get my BA! This is not fair and something is out of order with this University.
Reviewed Dec. 18, 2010
I was a returning student to UoP and it was the worst decision I could have made. Unable to attend my first class completely, I was charged $750 for not finishing this class. These were the rules they had set up to basically secure their money in any shape, way or form. When I returned, I was told that I was not able to return if I did not pay that money. Wanting to go back and finish my education badly, I agreed to pay them their money. From that point, I continued taking my classes with no problems, until I was offered employment out of town that made it entirely impossible for me to keep attending UoP classes. I had made sure not to fall in the same trap as before and finished my class to avoid paying foolishly again to them.
About two months later, I was called by a collection agency telling me that I owed $750 to UoP. At this point, I was confused on what was going on; I thought someone was playing a bad joke on me. Much to my surprise I refused to speak to this collection agency and went straight to UoP door for an explanation of what this fee was for again. Being sent to their accounting department, I spoke to one of the managers that basically told me that the school had misapplied my previous payment of $750 towards my new classes and that they were not going to make this money good for me. She rudely told me that if I wanted to be in good standing with the school, I should make payment arrangements with the collection agency to fix their mess. After talking to person after person who basically did not understand the concept of basic math for two to three months, I said, "No more."
I requested a meeting with the director of the local UoP and explained to her what my frustration was with the school and what nightmare they had caused me again. Much to my surprise, she was already aware of my situation, apologized and agreed to fix the issue for me. She advised me that my money of $750 was never credited to the collection agency by the school. UoP basically kept my money and did what they wanted with it. She explained that the school got paid twice by the collection agency and me. The school did consider this their misjudgement and basically was taking this as their loss financially for misapplying my payment. After she corrected the mistake, she asked me if I was willing to go back to their school. I basically said, "Hell, no." I would approach this school with great caution if you are considering it at all.
Reviewed Dec. 15, 2010
I wanted to report that I was a model doctoral student at UoP and successfully completed all coursework without ever taking any leave of absences. I can provide you with my transcript if needed. After my coursework, I had a mentor that was uninformed and caused me to miss critical deadlines for submitting my proposal.
Anyway, as soon as my FA ran out, I have received no guidance from UoP to help me complete the dissertation process. It is apparent that as soon as there was no more money, I became very unimportant to UoP.. Now I am left with a perfect A and B transcript, yet still needing to be mentored to complete my dissertation, yet since there is no more govt money coming, they no longer have any contact with me at all. Now it is time for me to repay my loan, which I am happy to do, yet I want to complete what I started and what I have been very successful with.
Reviewed Nov. 30, 2010
I enrolled at the UOP in June 2009. Everything seemed in order until November of that same year. I was mysteriously withdrawn from a class that I was taking. Even though I don’t recall missing any attendance days that week, my counselor Kristine **** informed me that she couldn’t see back into the system to check and that I just need to take the class over. She informed me that she will give me a voucher to take the class over. I just needed to pay the fees which came out amounting to $1354.60. The day my counselor told me about the balance, I let them charge $100 to my debit card. Needless to say, 2 weeks after I gave the first debit card charge, UOP sent my file to collections were the balance jumped from $1354.60 to $1368.60 and from then on, things went downhill a while after making a $500 payment. I lost my job due to the bad economy and began to get behind on my payments.
Well, eventually, I got another job and was going to pay the remaining balance which was supposed to be $754.60. I called my counselor and she informed me that my balance was $874.60. This completely surprised to me so I called UOP which transferred me to their complaint department which told me that my original balance was $1460.60. I asked them it must be wrong because I was quoted a different number and I have the paperwork that was sent from the school to prove it. But the woman had rudely stated that, "The balance is the balance and it’s not going to change." Needless to say, I hung up on the rude lady and contacted my new counselor and told her about the balance that was given to me by my old counselor and she told me she had no record of what was sent or said to me by my old counselor. She also told me I had to pay or I can’t return to class. So I paid the balance and submitted a complaint to the financial department for review. I highly doubt that I will get a response any time soon.
Reviewed Nov. 20, 2010
I enrolled into the Criminal Justice program in March 2010. Classes were to begin in April. By the end of April I received my first disbursement. I was told I would receive another disbursement in 4 months. Here it is November 20, 2010 and all my financial advisor can say is that I need to be patient and stay in attendance so that the transition of my funds will be smoothly. No explanation as to why I have not received my funds which were due in August. I am willing to be a part of a class action suit. They are rip offs and half of the staff are illiterate. I am so disgusted that I want to just drop out and go to a local community college. It may take longer to get a degree but at least I will have learned something.
Reviewed Nov. 19, 2010
In a search for higher education amidst the working class, I sought the promise of the University of Phoenix (UP). The financial counselor rushed me through the process over the phone so fast that I was not sure what I had just agreed to. Next was "class", sans a placement test. While it was apparent to me that different education levels were present in attendance, UP felt it necessary to group everyone in one sitting.
First lesson was an in-depth discussion about nothing. Furthermore, as lessons progressed, the instructor and my peers found new and interesting methods of turning each individual "lesson" into a discussion about their children and what wonderful parents they all are. This was definitely the most expensive support group I have ever been associated with, and I don't even have children.
Reviewed Nov. 19, 2010
I obtained my Associates Degree from UoP and decided to pursue my Bachelor's from there as well. Big mistake! They require you to take part in "learning teams". A large part of the grade for the class is based on the team assignments. First of all, they don't require admissions tests so you are in class with people who can't spell or grasp the finer points of grammar. The teams are based on geography and not skill level. I had people not bother to turn in assignments on my team and others who completely dictated deadlines that had nothing to do with actual deadlines.
I finally had enough after the 4th class and withdrew after the first week. Now I owe these blood suckers $400 because I took one week of a class. Don't waste your money with this school. If you can stay motivated and disciplined, you do learn but the team requirement is beyond ridiculous. Imagine having to pay thousands of dollars to learn with all the dysfunctional people you are forced to work with everyday. Imagine your academic success being based on projects with people that are idiots.
Reviewed Nov. 16, 2010
I've been working hard for my degree for some time. U of P offers the convenience of online courses and facilitated admissions and logistics processes. The business approach that they take is good up to a point. However, over the course of the last few months (I am now in my senior year), University representatives in a variety of roles have frustrated and almost completely obstructed me furthering my education.
It started when my financial aid and course adviser told me that I needed to earn 6 Humanities credits and 3 Math credits. I knew the Math credits were hanging out there but the Humanities requirement has been covered in a variety of ways. With 13 years of intermittent college under my belt, I have taken more than my fair share of arts, literature, and ethics classes (which are normally counted as humanities).
I applied for a reinterpretation of my transcript to account for the 6 Humanities credits and I've been "denied. "No official evaluation status is made available to me and in fact I have to file a grievance in order to get this information. How do I even know they reviewed my file? I have no insight into the evaluation process, who the evaluator was, if they need further information, or what the evaluation criteria are. It's all a big mystery. All I know is that the credits "cannot be applied," according to my academic adviser.
Reviewed Nov. 16, 2010
manor since his assignment. I had received an email and letter from the University stating my award from Pell was received. Then, I receive an email and rude phone call from Steve ** about how my award letter would be later and that it was a mistake on their part that I have to pay 2870 now. I am not sure if you or anyone there understands but not many people can shell out 3000.00 at a drop of a dime.
Now, the most recent issue is that I was in two courses and just took my finals on Friday of last week and yesterday I received a call from Steve saying that Pell was over awarded that on top of the 2870.00 he is withdrawing another 600.00 from my account.
I told him he is not authorized to do so and that I am tired - completely tired of these mistakes all of a sudden and the that they seem to be happening at the end of my courses. He began to raise his voice and get rude, so I hung up on him. In my haste I told him that I was done with him via email and done with Axia. I would like this matter straightened out, worked out, or resolved.As I stated, I am four classes from my Associates and planned on furthering my education. I would like this reviewed as soon as possible please.Thank you.
Reviewed Nov. 13, 2010
I did a lot of complaining already and this is a follow up report. I finally got my loan 5 months after starting school. Promises made to me were not kept, leaving me an inch away from losing everything I owned. A vigorous fight eventually bought good results. I got part of the loan and I hope the other part will come after this without a vigorous fight. The university seems to have no problems getting money for that tuition. But when it comes to caring about their students well being, they could give a **.
Reviewed Nov. 7, 2010
I am a student of The University of Phoenix. I recently withdrew a few days ago, due to the services I have received from them as well. When I first started in October '08, everything was fine. I started receiving my Pell grant disbursements to help me pay for living expenses and books. I decided to go for an Associate's degree in Health Administration/Medical Coding and Billing, and then further with a Bachelor's degree. It wasn't until now, that I started to have problems.
As soon as my classes were supposed to end, I was to continue my classes in the bachelor's degree program. I received a letter stating, I would be getting my next disbursement for a said amount of money. After many phone calls, and talking to many financial advisers, I still haven't received anything. This started in January. I was told that, as soon as I finished a semester and passed, I would get my disbursement. Like I said, the last time I got any disbursement, was in January. I am just about finished with my associate's degree, and had 2 math classes to do, and one medical coding and billing class to finish.
My instructor in my Math class was not helpful at all. She knew I struggled in math to begin with, and refused to help me in any way. I also had just had a new baby, 2 days before I started these math classes. I went through labor and delivery, and then started these math classes, only to get extremely stressed, out from the stress of having a a newborn baby and having diabetes. On top of it, I was admitted to the hospital for one week, to control my blood sugars due to high amounts of stress.
To add to that, I had carpal tunnel surgery on both hands, and when I told my instructor 2 weeks before surgery, she told me that I would have to have a doctor's note faxed to her personally, and one sent to the University of Phoenix. When I had reported the mistreatment I received by this instructor, I was completely ignored. I received an email about it two days ago, and all the email said was, when do you want to retake the math class that you failed, and that I was going to have to pay an out of pocket expense to retake the class.
This is ridiculous, because I still have over $3,000 in federal grants to cover my classes if needed. Not only that, but all of that money was supposed to be given to me for financial help to continue my education. I am probably completely ** over financially now, because I dropped out, but I did contact a fraud investigator, and I wrote a personal letter to the president of the United States, and I hope to hear from both of them soon. I wish to be involved in a class action law suit as well, because I could have had a good paying job 3 years ago, and not have had to be put in the hospital for stress over this. I hope that by complaining enough about this school, an attorney will contact all of us, and be able to compensate us for all of this mistreatment.
I have had to spend time in the hospital due to stress from these classes, financially and medically. I have lost 3 years of wages, when I could have had a good paying job by now. Now, I have to pay over $20,000 back in school loans, for a degree I will never get, and if I did get the degree I was told, I will never be able to use it, because their school does not accredit their degrees.
Reviewed Nov. 3, 2010
I failed one of my classes. I understand that this had to be paid for. I did not have the money to do so. I defaulted on my loan. I had lost my job, so I did not have the money to pay for it. The initial cost of the class was $2,000 and some odd dollars. My bill for the student loan became 5,918.63 The college recently sent me a new bill for the class for $2,850.00. So in short, a 2,000 dollar class became a $8,768.63, a nightmare.
Reviewed Nov. 3, 2010
I attended UOP for 4 years, recently graduated this summer. From time to time, I went through disappointments and complaints as well as other students who attended UOP. The courses were about $1500 every 5 weeks. You also get charged for about $85.00 for an online "book”. In other words, just pages most of the time. It was never used, and whether you would use the book or not, you still get charged. Basically, you are just printing chapters in their resource center. Recently, not only do you get charged for the "book", but if you want to print the chapters, you could only print a few pages. If you print any further, there are pages you have to pay once again.
This is ridiculous! In another note, you would certainly get a call from your finance counselor when they needed money for the most part when your loans wouldn’t kick in. Unfortunately, when you have complaints, they would certainly not return your calls in a timely manner. Some of the instructors shouldn’t have been teaching. Tuition is extremely pricey. During my four years, tuition was increased about more than 3 times. If I would have known then what I know now, I would have never attended UOP. I’m struggling finding ways to pay back the student loans ranging about $60,000+. I could have been driving a luxurious car instead.
Personally, I feel the enrollment counselors are very misleading and something needs to be done to prevent unhappy students. This should be illegal. If UOP staff would only break it down to you, and most importantly, be honest with the students and let you know what you are getting yourself into, it would be appreciated. I myself recruit employees, and no matter what, I'm honest with what positions/jobs I’m offering.
Reviewed Nov. 2, 2010
My experience with UOP started out well. I took a break from school for 3 months leaving 1 class left to take to begin a new academic year. I contacted the finance counselor asking if I need to wait to start school because I could not pay out of pocket. The counselor told me that I was clear to start class and the funds would be recalled that was returned to the lender. So I started class and 30 days later, I was told that I would have to pay for the class ($1750.00).
I continually asked the counselor to check and see what funds would be available before I started class, and I was assured that there would be no out of pocket. Due diligence was not none in this case to ensure that there was funds being recovered for the class. I know there was a way to check before I was instructed to start class. This has caused financial stress from the school. If I have known that the funds were not available, I would have waited to start class. We are told inaccurate information, whatever to keep us spending our money. I think this should be against the law.
I am stressed out and not trusting anything this school tells me. I will be more careful about the choices I make, especially when it comes to education.
Reviewed Nov. 2, 2010
I have had a bad experience with University of Phoenix on its financial aid. I received a letter from Direct Lending stating that my funds had arrived at the school. I contacted UOP and was told that it would be about 10 days before the funds would be released. It is now 2 weeks later and funds have not been posted yet. I was receiving inconsistent information from their third party financial aid processing center. I have yet to receive my funds.
My account is overdue and they are holding my financial aid. Once I did get someone on the phone that could tell me what was going on, they stated that they were just now requesting the funds and it would be an additional 20 days. Please research the college you wish to go to. This one is very unorganized and unprofessional. Find another college to go to. Due to the inconsistency and unprofessionalism, I have outstanding balances.
Reviewed Nov. 1, 2010
During my course of study at University of Phoenix, I had issues with the financial and academic departments. I e-mailed my counselor and financial aid counselor to exit out of this institution. I was supposed to get the proper forms to exit and did not receive anything for weeks which made my academics default.
I had financial disbursements from Sallie Mae come at the time I wanted to exit. I called Sallie Mae to discuss this matter and they said that the first disbursement would be able to be kept by University of Phoenix then Sallie Mae and I canceled the second as I would not be attending the school anymore. Somehow at the end of all this and throughout the year I was there, I ended up owing them $3800.00 and I cannot receive my transcripts or associate's degree.
Reviewed Oct. 31, 2010
I enrolled way back 2007 for my MS degree in nursing. I was assigned to Mr. Eric ** (academic counselor) for my program. I was out of school for 20 years and I was assured that online study is as easy as 123. I was approved and started my study, but unfortunately, I was left alone not knowing what to do. My counselor is nowhere to be found. Either he was out of post or vacationing somewhere. I kept calling my academic professor for help through online, but always on vacation and always communicating through online. I have to drop the course for it was so stressful on my part. I was charged with tremendous amount of money through student FAFSA loan.
I was harassed by the credit company even at work. I didn't enroll in the program again and I am devastated up to this year.
Reviewed Oct. 29, 2010
I enrolled in the University of Phoenix in 7/2/2009 for the BHSA degree. I had a financial advisor named Matt ** at the time. I filled out the FASFA as requested and let them know since I was active duty Navy that I would be using TA as well. Everything was going pretty well until my TA ran out and I should have been getting grants.
MATT ** did not process my information for grants. I now had Ms.*** as my FA advisor. I filled out another FASFA. Time and time again, I had to resubmit something to her and to UOP FA department. I even had to get my taxes redone to appease them. Once they were redone, the tax preparer realized we did not claim on of the children that we had. We did not know we could claim more than two children. So there was an adjustment.
We had to send in not one, but three statements about why there was a tax credit for a certain amount of money. We had to go into detail about any tax credits we received. Once we did that, I had to fill out a change form because they said I would need student loans to hold me over.
In the meantime, I am frustrated because they would say each time this is all you need. And every time, there would be something else. Ms. *** would call and was so patronizing, belittling and rude. The conversations never went well. After filling out the student loan forms three times and faxing in everything they asked for numerous times, I started a class, Ms. ***** calls me and says I will be responsible for the class they put me in because they where not sure if my FA was going to go through. I needed to submit another statement and form requesting student loans, again. Half way into the class, luckily everything went through.
Now, it's time for my TA to kick back in and I wanted to double up on classes. My academic advisor said since I had straight A's, this would not be a problem. Ms. ***** gets my TA voucher and says, "I don't know if they can take this since there is more than one class authorized on this form." I said yes, I can not route two separate ones, it's not how it works.
Every college I have went to has never had this issue or any of these issues. She said I am not going to argue if they don't take it then you can not be cleared. Okay, so they must have taken it because I am cleared. Now, one week into this five weeks, I let her know I am faxing the voucher for the next two classes. I fax it in, and I get an email last night saying I am not clear because she has not received my TA. I emailed her back to let her know I had already faxed it in two weeks ago.
I get a response back that because my IRN was not included in the email. She had no way to pull up my account and see. So how did she know it wasn't or was there in the first place? So I asked to be pulled off my training exercise to fax the voucher in again. At 07:03 in the morning, I faxed my voucher in with IRN written on top. I received a transmission from the fax stating it went trough. At 1:45 pm, I received another email from her saying I had not been cleared because I had not sent my TA, again. I have asked multiple times for a different advisor, with zero response. My grants should have been processed from the beginning and were not. She is rude, and disrespectful on many levels.
Reviewed Oct. 29, 2010
I have been a student at the UOP for almost a year now, it has been terrible. At first, it was going well and then you start having trouble with the class forums and spend most of your time on the phone with tech support. I failed one class and I do not even know why. I submitted my assignment, it was graded and I still received no credit! I have the copies of these things saved. As soon as I sent a copy to my academic counselor, the next day I got an email saying that I was removed from that class. Next, I logged in to my student web page. I got a warning message that my account has been accessed and to change my password. So I was removed from the class after it was finished, why? I think it was so that I could not access my information in that class, to prove to them that they were in the wrong, not me. I can not take any more classes till I pay them over $1,500 for the class that I should have passed. I did the work and I want credit for it! I keep getting a computer automated email telling me to apply for personal loans to pay them. No one is helpful at the UOP. I am so sick of the scam.
Reviewed Oct. 27, 2010
It's great that this website allows us to use as much space as we need. The University of Phoenix's feedback is always limited, and the BBB doesn't give enough space to really tell what is going on. In April 2009, I was finally enrolled with the University of Phoenix. The enrollment process seemed to take forever, mostly because my name change had never gone through. After jumping through a lot of hoops, I was happy to be back on track with my degree program that I had started 9 years before. The following 18 months were a nightmare. Obviously, I was so eager to have my school goals going again that I was willing to jump through a lot of hoops for these fraudsters. After a few months, I started having problems. Thinking that as long as I was vigilant, I would succeed, I continued to pursue my degree program, and maintained a 3.95 GPA.
Although I am always a straight “A” student, it seemed far too easy. Quite a bit of the course materials were not what I would consider high school worthy, and a majority of the other students didn't seem to be able to put a sentence together. The instructors didn't grade papers efficiently, and I started to make blatant mistakes in papers just to see if they were reading them. They weren't. The only corrections I received were, in fact, incorrect. I had to dispute several corrections that didn't make sense, and even had a couple of instructors retaliate as a result of my insistence. Unfortunately, it took me a while to realize that I was doing all of the work, and no one else was really doing anything. Every time there was a problem, I had to deal with it. Every time they screwed up my paperwork, I had to pay for it.
Every time there was a problem with FAFSA, I had to leap through firey hoops to solve the dispute. None of the after course surveys I did were ever responded to, and I put in a lot of detailed information that should have been reviewed thoroughly. There were times when other students were very obviously plagiarizing, yet they were never called out for it. In some discussions, they were literally using answers from Yahoo Answers (I got so bored with their lies that I started typing their answers into Google with quotation marks to see if they were being original or not). When this was pointed out to my instructors and my academic adviser, nothing was ever done. Their neglect was alarming.
After several serious problems with the University of Phoenix, and upon discovering that the Pell Grants I had qualified for were not recorded in my account, I started to add up the numbers. Their accounting is literally full of errors. There is an error on every single page, and the math doesn't add up at the end. To top it all off, when I officially withdrew from the school, they decided to "return" my federal aid funds, and started billing me within three weeks for $1,238.61.When I tried to get help with my problems, I was ignored. Instructors and facilitators don't seem to have any Code of Conduct to answer to, and the Student Code of Conduct is extremely vague and ambiguous. Now they are trying to pin me with an accusation that I violated the Student Code of Conduct nearly two weeks after I had officially withdrawn. They are threatening me now with charges that will "suspend" me from the school that I no longer attend (no longer enrolled), and put a violation on my permanent record. I'm sure that no matter what I do, they will put it on my record. It's an asinine attempt at further retaliation.
My complaint with the BBB finally came in today, and they said that they can't solve the issue. The University of Phoenix representative basically sent them a ** response, saying that they can't release any records, and that they sent a response to me directly. I have not received any responses from them. So now, I need an attorney. If anyone is interested in joining me for a class action suit against the University of Phoenix that will help to take them down for good, please email me at **. Thank you.
Reviewed Oct. 27, 2010
I have a story that tops anyone else’s hardship story. University of Phoenix really did it this time. If I die from stress, please remember where it came from. I have been waiting for my grad plus loan for 4 months. I was given a very hard time and finally I was approved, I thought.
I was certified for the funds and given a day that it would be dispersed. Finally, I made it over the hump, I thought. My disbursement dates were October 12 and November 25 of 2010. Boy, was I relieved. I could finally pay my rent, pay my car note and take care of my boys. I could finally buy the computer I was so desperately needed. Well, guess what. I was told on October 27th that I was denied because the financial aid office did not send in the paper work on time and they ran another credit check for a new case and I was denied this time. Can this be real? Well, I spent hours crying to the point where I feel sick. I have no way to pay my rent. My children and I are going to be homeless and I am definitely going to lose my car. We are barely making it food-wise. I feel like I am going to have a stroke and this is why I am saying that if I die, blame it on the University of Phoenix.
I am a single parent with three boys. I could not afford to go to school without financial aid. I would have never gone if I thought for one minute that financial aid was going to be a problem. I told them this from the beginning and they insisted that I start because financial aid would help. The University of Phoenix had no problem getting the portion of my financial aid to cover my tuition, though. That is all they cared about: getting paid. The financial aid for my tuition was there a week after I started, yet it took them four months to grant me a grad plus loan and deny it.
Direct Loan said that they ran another credit check on me four months later and denied me. It was my financial hardship of starting this school that caused my credit to change. I suffered waiting for this loan and I suffered because I chose to study over going to work. That is what I should have done. The ** with school. Go to work.
I am emotionally stressed to the point of feeling sick. Without this loan, I am going to lose my house and car. My children are going to suffer even more. I was approved for this loan and I have the papers to prove it. I was given disbursement dates. How can this school do such a thing to a person, especially a student?
I talked to Peter, the supervisor at Direct Loans and he asked me to send in a copy of my credit report so that he could try to overturn it. This is a nice gesture but I expected this loan on the 12th of October. So did the landlord and the car notes. I need an advocate or a lawyer because if Peter does not overturn this decision. I will sue for emotional distress, breach of contract and physical damage. I will also sue for child neglect and abuse because this is exactly what they have done to my boys. I also want the charges that I have incurred in this school to be reversed because they did not keep their agreement and caused me grave hardship. This can not happen to anyone else. It is too painful.
Here’s the salt on the open wound. I went to New York to take care of business because I expected to have my loan for me and the children to get back. I can not get back because out of nowhere they denied a loan that was approved. I hate University of Phoenix and I will not recommend this school to anyone. They are horrible. Most of the people in the financial aid office are incompetent and from what I see, they only care about getting paid. I have read all the other terrible complaints. Anyone, please contact me if you want a class action law suit.
Reviewed Oct. 27, 2010
I have a story that tops anyone else’s hardship story. University of Phoenix really did it this time. If I die from stress, please remember where it came from. I have been waiting for my grad plus loan for 4 months. I was given a very hard time and finally I was approved, I thought.
I was certified for the funds and given a day that it would be dispersed. Finally, I made it over the hump, I thought. My disbursement dates were October 12 and November 25 of 2010. Boy, was I relieved. I could finally pay my rent, pay my car note and take care of my boys. I could finally buy the computer I was so desperately needed. Well, guess what. I was told on October 27th that I was denied because the financial aid office did not send in the paper work on time and they ran another credit check for a new case and I was denied this time. Can this be real? Well, I spent hours crying to the point where I feel sick. I have no way to pay my rent. My children and I are going to be homeless and I am definitely going to lose my car. We are barely making it food-wise. I feel like I am going to have a stroke and this is why I am saying that if I die, blame it on the University of Phoenix.
I am a single parent with three boys. I could not afford to go to school without financial aid. I would have never gone if I thought for one minute that financial aid was going to be a problem. I told them this from the beginning and they insisted that I start because financial aid would help. The University of Phoenix had no problem getting the portion of my financial aid to cover my tuition, though. That is all they cared about: getting paid. The financial aid for my tuition was there a week after I started, yet it took them four months to grant me a grad plus loan and deny it.
Direct Loan said that they ran another credit check on me four months later and denied me. It was my financial hardship of starting this school that caused my credit to change. I suffered waiting for this loan and I suffered because I chose to study over going to work. That is what I should have done. The ** with school. Go to work.
I am emotionally stressed to the point of feeling sick. Without this loan, I am going to lose my house and car. My children are going to suffer even more. I was approved for this loan and I have the papers to prove it. I was given disbursement dates. How can this school do such a thing to a person, especially a student?
I talked to Peter, the supervisor at Direct Loans and he asked me to send in a copy of my credit report so that he could try to overturn it. This is a nice gesture but I expected this loan on the 12th of October. So did the landlord and the car notes. I need an advocate or a lawyer because if Peter does not overturn this decision. I will sue for emotional distress, breach of contract and physical damage. I will also sue for child neglect and abuse because this is exactly what they have done to my boys. I also want the charges that I have incurred in this school to be reversed because they did not keep their agreement and caused me grave hardship. This can not happen to anyone else. It is too painful.
Reviewed Oct. 26, 2010
I've been pursuing a Doctorate degree in Education from the University of Phoenix since 2007. The institution is presently indicating that I'm not financially cleared for my next class (I have 2 left after this one,) due to an error in judgment on my behalf due to being misinformed by a Financial Aid staff member (the agent sent me the entire loan amount w/o taking the funds necessary to cover the classes). I am in double jeopardy as I have exhausted all the student loans and subsequently would not be in this situation provided that the advice given by the institution was accurate.
To add insult to injury, I had to take out an additional loan of $20k which the school is presently indicating will not cover the last three classes given the types of disbursement dates that are presently on file. None of this would have occurred provided that they trained their staff to inform students with accurate information. Please let me know if you can point me in the right direction.
My next action steps are to contact the Board of Directors at the University of Phoenix, as this institution does not have a grievance process in place to allow students to voice opinions regarding issues such as these. Please advise as I am concerned that I have incurred a massive amount of student loans but will not obtain a degree.Thank you for your attention and assistance concerning this matter.
Reviewed Oct. 26, 2010
Betty ** is on a power trip and I am not budging. She is the "chair" for UOP Nursing program at the Lonetree campus. Earlier this year, she attempted to threaten me, because I was vocal regarding the the simulation labs. I do not like them, she stated, "trust me you do not want to be on my radar". I am paying way too much money to practice on some dumb dolls. I wanted clinical, real patients.
She tried to fail me for leaving class 45 minutes early after that, but not fail the other two students who left at the same time I did. Then this past week, she kicked me out of the program, with only 9 classes left. Someone told her, they thought my fingernails were acrylic. They are not acrylic, I offered to drive to school to show her, she replied "that's not necessary, you need to learn to take responsibility, you can rejoin the program in January". I very much would like to teach her a lesson.
All my student loan money had to be returned to sender making me personally responsible for paying for the last 3 classes. I have enrolled in another program which is going to cost approx $15,000.00 more for my degree, than finishing the last 9 classes, and it's going to take me longer to finish, since Univ. of Phoenix credits do not transfer, like they claim they do. I will be missing out on about a year of a bigger salary I would have been getting, had I been left alone to graduate 10/2011.
Reviewed Oct. 24, 2010
My husband and I enrolled in the UOP after numerous phone calls. But they are not giving what we were told. First, they did not give us a written letter telling us how much our pell grant was or when it would be disbursed. They also did not tell me what the tuition cost would be or my graduation date, which I just found out they have to due by law. Also, they said the courses emphasis alternates weekly between reading and online discussion one week and a work project the next. That is also not true. I have weekly reading and discussions plus a project due every week. They do not alternate. I enrolled in April ‘10 and received my first pell grant disbursement. But now they say I don’t receive another one in till Jan. 2011.
Reviewed Oct. 23, 2010
I began going to the University of Phoenix in 2008. I filled out and faxed all of the proper paperwork to receive the loans I needed to be able to attend school. For about a year and a half, I was still faxing paperwork to my advisor at the University of Phoenix who was supposed to be processing my information. All the while, every time I would finish a set of classes, more money was stacking up, leaving a balance of about $4,000.00 unpaid. Without me being notified, my advisor was switched to someone else. So, while I was faxing my paperwork to whom I thought it should be going to, no one was getting it, causing my loans to default. The University of Phoenix turned my outstanding balance over to collections and will not release any of my credits. I am not unable to attend their school for their negligence of not processing my information.
Reviewed Oct. 22, 2010
No one knows where the funds are and they are investigating to find out where the funds are. In the mean time, I am losing my house, car and my children and my grades are suffering because I relied on what they said they would do. I am a poor person. I cannot afford to go to school with no funds and this is exactly what they are making me do. All victims, let’s band together and do something about this torture. I have never been so humiliated and mistreated in my life.
I am losing my house, my car and my grades are suffering because I do not have the proper equipment to work with. I would have never started school if I thought that I would not get financial aid. University of Phoenix has caused me and my family grave hardship. I did not need extra help to do bad. I am not giving names or getting a lawyer right now because I am giving them the chance to remedy this. If there is no correction soon, I will take matters further because this is injustice. Lives should not be played with like this. This university is hurting too many people.
Reviewed Oct. 19, 2010
When I first applied to University of Phoenix, I applied with some financial help from my employer. I was told I could apply for financial aid and grants. During the process, I re-iterated the need for grants as I was supporting my child and was making below 30k annually.
As many before have stated here, I was told that loans had been dispersed at the same time I was told that I was not eligible for Pell Grants. I felt as if University of Phoenix was setting me up to go through preferred lenders at their benefit. I was unable to continue paying the amount needed that was not covered by student loans. I had to leave the school. The school took my last payments from my student loans. They then charged me and attempted collections for loans that I was already forced to pay upon through their preferred lenders. I essentially was made to pay twice for the same amounts for education I did not receive. At the time I was made to feel as if I had done something wrong. I was made to feel that I was supposed to pay the money twice over. Being younger and not the most wise to these sorts of scams at the time I have hardly any documentation and not have collections and garnishment against me. Even their collections agents are shady. They processed a garnishment request in another state without any legally sent notice.
Currently in debt for loans that I cannot pay as their education is not valued in the workplace. My credits are not worth much if I were to transfer and I would have to start almost all over again.
Reviewed Oct. 17, 2010
July 23, 2010, I was informed that I had been selected for verification and that the university would need a completed verification sheet, copies of my 2009 taxes and a spouse's taxes. I did inform them that I was not married. I have Chuy at the university to fax the copies of my taxes and the completed verification sheet signed. On September 21, I emailed Daniel letting him know that I went on the FASA website to check my 2010-2011 status and informed Daniel that the website was only showing my 2009. Daniel was no help. He informed me that I could try the FASA help line.
On September 27, 2010, the Financial Aid office was requesting a High School Diploma, reason being they stated that I did not check the box High School Diploma. I asked Daniel why they did not use my 2009 application for financial aid, that nothing had changed. Daniel informed me that they could not but that they needed a diploma. I contacted my high school and asked if I could get an Official Transcript for the year I graduated in 1972. They mailed it to me and I took it to the school because Daniel said that they had to have it. I left the envelope with Lori at the front desk and asked that she delivers it to Rebecca, the manager at the school. He had started to ask me for $90.00 for my Biology class and I asked him and my academic counselor why this was needed. I thought my financial aid covered all resources for my classes. Daniel informed me that the information was needed before my 10/18 other class starts or I would need to make other financial arrangements.
Now, I had sent all documents that Daniel and the Financial Aid Office requested. On 10/11/10, I was informed by email that my financial aid file will be deactivated and is no longer in process, that I should make other arrangement. I forwarded the email to Daniel asking what else is needed. He said to disregard the email, that he was waiting on his manager to review the documents. On 10/15/10, I received an email from the Financial Aid Office stating that I had been selected in a process call verification and that they would need a signed and completed verification sheet with all members in my household listed. If I am a dependent student, they would need my parents' signature. They are requesting that I resubmit an updated independent verification worksheet to be re-signed, re-dated to current date. The household section of the worksheet should be updated to list all of the people living in your household before the document is resubmitted.
If the household information that was submitted on your previous Independent Verification Worksheet is correct, we will need you to complete and submit a signed and dated statement clarifying this instead of an updated worksheet. I have complied with every request from Daniel and the University of Phoenix. I am 54 years old and both my parents are deceased. I would think they could have gotten all information from my previous 2009 application. All I want is a degree in Human Resources and had no idea that the university would send an individual through all of this being that everything was approved by the Department of Education. I feel that if the Department of Education found that additional information was needed, they would have contacted me about this matter.
Reviewed Oct. 15, 2010
I began attending University of Phoenix on September 13, 2010. I was told that I had to wait 30 days for my financial aid disbursement. Now it’s October 13 and they are telling me that I have to wait another 10 days for disbursement. Now I misunderstood what was told to me, "Go Figure.” Also, when and if I receive my financial aid disbursement, UOP is paying for 4 classes, two of which is for the following semester. This policy is not instituted at other colleges. Last semester I attended Davenport University and I received a refund for every two classes I took. But at UOP, they do not call it semesters, they call it "Blocks of Classes". Furthermore, Rebecca ** had the nerve to ask me if I am attending school for financial aid. Wrong question.
“Yes, I am attending to get an education. Know what! Cat got your tongue.” Then she continued on to say, “Well, Mr. **, you can elect to manage your own funds if you want to and you can pay UOP when you receive your financial Aid." Sounds good doesn't it? But if you elect from the beginning of the semester or block to allow UOP to manage your funds, and for some reason during the class you elect to do so, "you cannot until the following semester.” UOP is still entitled for that block of classes. Then Rebecca ** says, "Oh, yeah, you’re right.” Now I realize that all University of Phoenix want is my financial aid monies, period. Do not be a fool like myself. Stay away from University of Phoenix.
Reviewed Oct. 15, 2010
I was attending the University of Phoenix starting in August 2008 to earn my AA online and then continue my education to become a teacher in special education. I was told by them that they had the programs that I need to become a teacher in the state of California. I completed all my classes with good grades up until I started taking my Algebra classes. I was having trouble and asked several times for the help. Went to the campus in my hometown and was told by the tutor that I was stupid to take it online and she acted like she was bothered to help me.
So I then asked my advisor and she said that there is online help and tutoring. I tried, to no avail, as I waited for help on the online tutoring for over an hour. I failed that class so I understood that I needed to take it again so my financial advisor told me that I had enough funding to pay for the class but when I needed to take the second part I would have to pay the fee. It was like $500 so I said okay. I retook the class and again with the frustration of never getting help, I failed. So my money for that financial aid year was used up.
I started calling other colleges to find out that I didn't even need those classes that I already took math and that qualified. Then I started to research more into my school to find out that when I am done with my school it would not be good here in California. They didn't offer that yet and they had no special education program for my masters. Very upsetting to me. I went college shopping to find a program that worked for me and when I found it and we were setting up my schedule. We discovered I took a lot of unnecessary classes and was wasting my school money and time. Now, they are telling me that I owe them $1800. But I know for a fact that when I left I was free and clear.
This may result in putting a delay in my education and the fact that I might have to pay for this, would put me who is a single mother of three girls with only one income in a difficult position. If they garnish me for this in my taxes in the future, this hinders me from paying bills as I use that money to survive. This has put a lot of unneeded stress on me and my family and has delayed me from getting the education I have been working so hard for.
Reviewed Oct. 13, 2010
I know that many people have a problem with this school, but I am one of the few that do not and I would like to share a little of my story because I do not think this school is as horrible as some are making it out to be. I started my classes in February 2009 for my Associates in Medical Billing/Coding. From the first day that I began correspondence with the school I was getting more help than I ever thought I would. My Academic Counselor would call me weekly to make sure I was doing ok, and my Financial Adviser would return any calls I made.
There came a time this year that I had to take a break from the school because I lost my home and the only internet access I had. All of my counselors were extremely helpful to me at that time. She sent me a waiver form via email for the tuition for the classes I had to drop to be taken care of so that I could continue with my education without any problems when I was able to. Unfortunately this is the FA I have now that as you will see in a moment is not really living up to her reputation. The only problem I have ever had with this school is that my current FA never seems to answer emails or phone calls/messages anymore.
But at the same time my AA calls me constantly, as well as the rep that is helping me transition from my Associates to my Bachelors degree. While I may not have always agreed with my teachers on certain grades, each and every one has been receptive and listened to the issue I had, and willingly discussed it with me, as well as resolutions to improve the problem areas. I have even had grades fixed because of these situations where I did not agree with the teacher. I never had a problem with any of them.
I truly feel for the people that have had issues with the school because I would not want to go through these things. But it's not always like that. I think UoP is a very good school. For instance, when I was in HS my grades were ok, but they could have been better. Due to the resources the school provides, and the help I have received from my instructors I have managed to maintain a 3.6 GPA. I have a few classes ahead to finish out my degree that I am concerned about because the subjects are difficult for me, but I have all the confidence in the world that I will do well because I will get the help I need from my school just like I always have.
Reviewed Oct. 12, 2010
I have had the worst experience with this university. How is that they return financial aid funds for a particular class in which I was currently enrolled in? I decided to withdraw from the school after I fully completed the class, but they sent a total of $1798.00 back to financial aid while I was enrolled in school. Aaron ** informed me he did not understand why these funds were returned because the funds were sitting in my account. He stated there were no notes in the system why this has occurred. I explained I should not be liable for a bill of $1729.00. Now this balance I owe "supposedly" is from my second class in which I have the, but how is it possible when in fact the funds which were returned was from the last class I had completed?
It sounds like they are punishing students when they decide to leave the school. This all happened within the last 4 months. It seems like when I completed the withdrawal process online informing them I was leaving after the class I was in was completed and with a passing grade, I suddenly have a balance. By the way, before I withdrew, I had a credit of $69.00, which Aaron stated I was supposed to be sent this refund, but of course no one knows anything and they are trying to stick me with this balance.
Reviewed Oct. 10, 2010
I am not familiar with any of the experiences mentioned here. I have been a student at UOP for years and I love it! I've read the complaints here but these issues are addressed in the current handbook. There is no charge for class room materials and yes some teachers are difficult but that at any university. I have worked full time and completed all of my courses without failure.
The materials and instruction are simple and detailed. I would agree the advisors are less informed but that's there job. They are trained to keep you there, that's how they make money! I have always received a response and there are many people to talk to if I have a problem. I've also had many personal struggles but my advisors where always there for me. During the aftermath of a hurricane, miscarriage, and pregnancy, I have always received the support of UOP and its faculty.
Reviewed Oct. 8, 2010
This school is a joke. They are like used car salesperson. Once they sell you what they want, they will never bow down and say they made a mistake. I have been trying to get answers from them, but the calls went unanswered. No return calls or someone who knows the right answers. I found out that I owe this school, which I attended for over a year, $1800.00. I asked them for a billing summary.
They said okay, I will have that in the mail ASAP. Still, nothing in my box. I was misled by Amy ** of finances that I would only owe $550.00. I called my academic advisor, Ivan, my military advisor, Andrew **, Chris (a manager from financing), Jeff and Jennifer with no answer! I was told by Chris that they were not supposed to talk to me since my account is in collections. **, unprofessional school. I am a Phoenix, no! I am a fool for ever attending this waste of school.
Reviewed Oct. 8, 2010
This school is a joke. They are like used car sales person. Once they sell you what they want, they will never bow down and say they made a mistake. I have been trying to get answers from them but the calls go unanswered. No return calls, or someone that knows the right answers. I found out I owe this school, which I attended for over a year, $1800.00.
I asked them for a billing summary they said ok I will have that in the mail ASAP. Still nothing in my box. I was misled by Amy ** of finances that I would only owe $550.00. I called my academic advisor Ivan, and my military advisor Andrew **, Chris (a manager from financing), Jeff, and Jennifer with no answer! I was told by Chris that they were not supposed to talk to me since my account is in collections. Stupid unprofessional school. I am a Phoenix, No! I am a fool for ever attending this waste of school.
Reviewed Oct. 5, 2010
I transferred to UOP to get my bachelors, finished one class and dropped from the second one. I dropped the class because of comments made by a teacher which he was not supposed to say during class. I work for a non-profit organization and he made bad comments about people working for non-profits, about homeless people and making fun of them. It was not ethical. For me, that was racism and I do not tolerate it so I decided to drop and look for other place to continue. Now UOP is saying to me that I have to pay them almost $600 (before Oct. 15th) because I dropped the class.
I was really specific about dropping the class and they made excuses and tried to convince me to stay. Now they are saying that I did not tell them on time, but I have the emails. If I got a student loan, I do not see why I have to pay them the next week. I experienced a bad moment being in that class, being offended with comments that were not part of the class. They told me that they were going to send me to collectors if I do not pay. I cannot pay at this time as I have other student loans from the college before. I was offended by the comments of the teacher since he knew I worked for a non-profit and helped the homeless.
Reviewed Oct. 3, 2010
The University of Phoenix has hired a professor who was charged with multiple felony counts of burglary, theft and robbery in a fraudulent scheme. The professor, Juanita ** is a disgraced Police Lieutenant out of Las Vegas, Nevada. Although the charges were subsequently dismissed on a technicality, the disgraced police officer was forced to resign from the police force. I have notified University of Phoenix and they have done nothing.
Would you want a disgraced former police officer who was forced to resign and was indicted by a grand jury teaching your children? University of Phoenix was notified and has done absolutely nothing. Leave University of Phoenix immediately, they hire criminals! Good luck.
Reviewed Sept. 27, 2010
We are a private investigation firm, with class action lawsuit lawyers on our side. We are on a hunt to bring this company, University of Phoenix of Apollo Group to justice, due to manipulation and theft of their company. If anyone feels like they have been treated wrongly from University of Phoenix, UOP, Apollo Group, or any affiliates of this company please contact our fraud email uopfraud@gmail.com. It is very important to inform us of your experience at their school. This will be a class action, civil suit.
Reviewed Sept. 25, 2010
My experience at University of Phoenix has been a nightmare. I had gotten my undergraduate degree at another University and was hoping for a similar experience. Not! Even during the application process I was told several times that all my paperwork was complete and was given the green light to begin classes. I got a call from my advisors noting that they had not certified me (regarding my Fin Aid) and they was missing my prior transcripts. I'm very organized and detailed when it comes to business matters and I had followed up with my prior school to make sure they had done their part. But I contacted the Registrar at my old school personally and she verified it had been sent. I paid for transcripts to be mailed and faxed to UoP.
Once I began classes the issues continued. I was withdrawn from class, entire schedule was removed, even now, and I received my letter regarding my financial aid which states that the next distribution is due 9/16/10. Today is 9/23/10 and I have not received any money to pay for my class. I now have outstanding invoices totaling 3610.00. I have been invoiced for a class that starts 10/21/10.
I contacted both of my advisors of which I have not gotten a returned call from either. I hate the day I stepped foot on UoP campus. My most recent problem is that I had asked when enrolled about the Accreditation (AACSB) and was told they (UoP) was fully accredited. I had visited another local university in my area with hopes of transferring and was informed by their dept head that if I were to transfer they would not accept any of my credits from Phoenix. I left in tears because I now feel as though I have wasted several months of hard work and dedication (straight A's) for nothing. If I don't continue there at UoP I will have to start over and incur more loan debt to complete my program. This is not fair and something needs to be done.
Reviewed Sept. 23, 2010
I have completed all work required for my Business and Management Degree and UOP have not sent them to me yet. They are talking about I owe them $1,700.00 dollars for a class that I had to re take because of the instructor. I think that it is unfair to hold my degrees when I have finished all my work and have earned the degrees. Now I am stuck paying back all these loans and still don’t have a 4 year degree. I am stuck in debt up to my ears because of this university. I will never recommend anyone to this college as long as it exists.
Reviewed Sept. 22, 2010
I really thought I was starting off in the right direction going back to school. I decided to sign up with UOP on 3/29/10 and they made me feel I was doing the right thing by signing up with them. Couple of months was going smoothly but than after the four months I started to worry. The instructors would post my graded assignments three weeks late and I have many of times told my counselor about the situation but it still goes on. I'm at the end of my six classes and I don't feel I learned any thing while taking classes online. My grade point average has been 3.5 but my grades has dropped after founding out that UOP been in a class action suit before. I worry about my finances and I have tried to keep my credit stable but now I'm worried that I made the wrong choice signing up with UOP in the first place.
Today 9/22/10, I received a call from my financial advisor (Ms. ***) stating that I need to pay for the next set of classes out of pocket about $1,400. I asked her why do I have to pay $1,400 if I have financial aid to cover my tuition. Ms. *** states because tuition went up, there is a balance that's left over. Ms. *** states I can use my loans to pay off the classes but I explained to her I cannot afford this school. I asked her how much will I pay for my associates degree when I'm through. She states it's just an estimate around $24,000.
UOP already tapped $8,000 of my financial aid in six months and additional $4,000 in loans. I'm scared and confused. All I wanted to do is get a education to better myself and all I see UOP doing is juicing me out more money out of my own pocket. If I can pay for school out of pocket then I would have went to a school here in my own city, paying less money. Basically, they will not transfer any of my credits unless I pay them the money and I can even go further in my education because I just do not have the money. I'm just flat out hurt and disgusted.
Reviewed Sept. 22, 2010
Well I attending University of Phoenix in 2006-2007 and during that time while attending classes after my second or third quarter, I need to drop one of the classes due to medical issues going on and it was approved from my instructor and counselor since it was only a couple of days into the class. Now, I am being charged from $2200 which is on my credit report and the University said they sent the money back to Sallie Mae of which Sallie Mae never received and why am I owing if I dropped the class in the allotted time? Please help. I saw several other complaints from people online as well
Reviewed Sept. 22, 2010
Unlike many of the other complaints I have read, I have had a good experience with the school until now. My financial adviser and academic adviser have been at my beck and call, and contacted me on a regular basis. The thing that has upset me is this year's financial aid/grant money. Last year, I was awarded the full grant (which I should have been for being a single mom receiving no support and making pennies), and this year I anticipated receiving the same amount around the same times because nothing in my life has changed.
The extra money has really helped me out while in school. I work up to fifty hour weeks to make ends meet, and still get a's and b's, though I have received a few c+'s. Sometimes I just get tried. Anyway, I have been getting the run around about my Pell grant this year, and should have received the money last month. After receiving no information other than it was still processing, I was told that all the students receiving financial aid are now eligible for more grant money so they are reprocessing everyone one's applications from 09/10 and 10/11, and the process would take even longer.
This is unacceptable. There are students like me who rely on this money, or at least the information of a definite time they will or will not receive the money. I have had a pretty flawless experience with the school until now. This is not my first time in school. I attended a large and well established 4-year university right after high school, and do not think the University of Phoenix has sub-par curriculum, but am starting to wonder about all the whispers I here about the school. I am a firm believer that is many people say the same thing about you, and then it's most likely true.
Reviewed Sept. 21, 2010
I wanted to switch my Masters program from Education to Business. UOP would not allow this until I paid all the tuition from the current Masters program I was in. I could not pay the full tuition and tried to make payment arrangements. They denied any type of payment arrangement and wanted their money in full within 2 weeks. It went to collections at Reliant Capital where they also refused to make payment arrangements.
My HR dept received a call from Reliant stating that they will be putting a lien on my account. I contacted them again to make some kind of arrangement and was denied again. I even told them that I could pay the full balance in 2 months but they wanted half now and then the rest in two months. Now they are threatening to take me to court.
Reviewed Sept. 21, 2010
Like many other students that have gone to University of Phoenix, I am quite unsatisfied with them as a school after several mistakes made with my financial aid and the clear lack of support I have received from the school to remedy the situations that arose from their own inadequacies.
I am stuck now going to this school with only a few more classes to go to get my bachelor's degree but I feel like it was a huge rip off and I really wish I had gone to a different school that might have given me a better education and was actually worth the time and money. This school seems to hold back on the federal grants that you should be getting and forces you to get the full amount of any student loans available, then they hold that money too for as long as they can. I think they are a scam and if someone starts a class-action lawsuit, I want in.
I'm pretty sure that I lost thousands of dollars in federal aid because of the mistakes they made for my PELL grants in 2009 when I went on a leave of absence due to giving birth in July of that year. I have documented all the issues I've had with the Financial Aid Department and strangely enough, even though I had problems with them last year, which I was told was related to my leave of absence, this year I'm experiencing problems again and I haven't even taken a break, keeping consistently good grades, and made conscious efforts to communicate early with the Financial Aid Department regarding my expected disbursements.
I am very unsatisfied with this school and even though I got one of my best friends to enroll there last year. I don't think that I will recommend them ever again.
Reviewed Sept. 21, 2010
I started with UOP several years ago. At the time I was raising children, had elderly parents and due to personal issues, I had to drop out of class. I have been paying for the classes I took, or didn't take for the past 8 years or so. This year, I lost my brother to cancer, and mother in law to a tragic accident. My children are all grown so I decided to pursue my education again. Now, this may seem foolish. I'm an RN and have been working ER for many years. I am almost 60 years old, and decided that the Emergency room is getting a little to stressful. I know that there are many area's of nursing to work in, but this body is getting tired. I have a great deal of knowledge and experience that I would love to pass on to new nurses. So, once again, I got with UOP to finish my BSN and go on to get my Masters in order to teach nursing.
School was going quite well for a while, I was carrying a very good GPA, but then I ran into a class that I found difficult. I was having problems finding my way around the school library on the computer. At that time, I was taking 2 classes, and after speaking to my adviser, we decided that I would drop the one class and utilize the free courses the school offers to familiarize myself with the library, as well as APA formatting.
This is where my nightmare began. The counselor had told me not to post in the class anymore, and they would drop me from it on their end. I started the free courses offered, which lasted a week, and when I got back into the school to see when my next class would start, I found I was still enrolled in the class they were supposed to have dropped. In the mean time, my instructor had sent me messages asking me what I was going to do and determine if I could still salvage the class and pass. I sent him a note telling him that I had dropped the class and he was supposed to have been notified.
Shortly, after communicating with the instructor, I was informed that because I had posted in the course, I would receive a failing grade. But because it was "partly their fault" for not getting the course dropped, they would reimburse me for that class, but I was going to have to take it again and receive at least a C for a grade because it was a necessary class to continue in the program.
I agreed to retake the class, after all, I felt partly responsible for what happened, they did tell me not to post. I just foolishly panicked, since surely they wouldn't be so negligent that they would just fail to do their job. So, I retook the class and things just got worse. At the beginning of the course, I printed off the syllabus which gave us the assignments for the course. It posted week by week assignments which were do, when they were do and what was expected of the papers. The last paper do, on the original syllabus was on A vulnerable population in the work place. I did the paper according to the original syllabus. However, at the beginning of the last week, she changed the paper to be a vulnerable population for something else.
I can't remember the detail of that paper at this time. I failed to read her post on the new assignment. I sent my paper in early on the day that it was due. The instructor sent me a note, telling me I had submitted the wrong paper. I thought "ok, I'm not gonna panic, I have till midnight to do another paper. " So I sent her an e-mail and told her I would have another paper in before it was due, however, she informed me that once she submitted her comments to the student, she would not be able to accept another paper.
I had been holding a 3.7 in that class until that point. But the last paper that she would not allow me to redo because her "comments" on the paper, which was simply "you submitted the wrong paper" brought my grade down to a C-. This grade washed me out of the program. I would have been done with my masters by March or April of next year. The school is now trying to tell me that I still owe them the money for the rest of the classes which I should have been able to take. I sent in all the appeals I was told I could send, and lost both. I also told UOP where they could go to collect their money. This whole event has been devastating to me.
I only hope that more people continue sending in things that have happened to them, and that we can all find a way of shutting that school down. Because it is very obvious that they are not there to provide education. I would also like to find a way to recover all or some of the monies which the school has already cost me.
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2010
This is about financial aid charges and charges for withdrawn classes. I didn't receive grants that I am clearly qualified and I was told that I would qualify for. I was never told that the grant and aid amount I was approved for and the statements just showed charges for materials and classes. I now owe an enormous amount of money and only completed 4 classes
Reviewed Sept. 19, 2010
When I initially decided to return to college to complete a Master’s level degree, I did an extensive amount of research or I believe I did. I called various universities and asked multiple questions ranging from tuition cost to transfer ability. University of Phoenix was where I decided to go.
First, my academic advisor was switched multiple times then my financial advisor was changed also. I found the professor teaching the course to be biased and grading papers based on personal desire of writing style. I had been checking with my advisors consistently in regard to doubling up my last four classes. Making sure this would not affect my financial aid. This was a conversation I had on several occasions and I was re-assured by both financial and academic advisors that this was fine and would not have any effect on my financial aid. So I doubled up on my last four courses taking two classes at a time.
I was able to walk in graduation ceremonies on June 15, 2010 but I did not complete my last two. The following Tuesday, I contacted UOP to request my diploma. I was informed that I was not considered a graduate because I had a balance on my account. I contacted my financial aid advisor and she informed that yes there was a balance because I doubled up classes. Apparently, my financial aid was returned to the lender because doubling up had an effect on the amount of weeks the loan was formed for. I received an apology and I was told I could make a payment plan if needed. Then I was put on a roller-coaster ride with one excuse after another. All were lies, one advisor was checking into the situation. I was never getting return calls.
Finally, two and a half months later, I contacted my financial advisor and informed her that I was going to file a suit in court naming her and my academic advisor as primary and as employees of UOP for the balance on my account plus damages based on their false information given to me. A few days later, my financial advisor contacted me to inform me that she felt responsible for half of the balance and was going to pay it herself. I asked who is supposed to pay the rest. Upon making a follow up call with the head of the financial aid department and explaining my plans on moving forward with legal claims, all of a sudden, my account was at a zero balance. Then I explained how holding up on my degree and transcripts have affected my ability to pursue employment.
Well, three months later, I received my official transcripts by UPS. And a few days later, I received my diploma by UPS. But the fact remains, they have an obligation to the damages. I am still considering seeking damages in court. I am praying I am able to obtain my state licensure with this degree I have obtained. How can a university such as this have individuals working with students giving misleading and damaging information. I would love to know if anyone has started a lawsuit.
Reviewed Sept. 15, 2010
On July 17th, my grandfather (my only father) passed, three days later, I had to have surgery before his funeral. I contacted my academic adviser requesting a three week break. I was told I could not take a break because it was the start of a new academic year. I was told, I wanted the break after the classes. The following week, a robber invaded my home while I was at work and my 12, 11 and 4 year old daughters were home alone. My grandfather would watch them during the summer months.
The instructor that told me I should have told him in advance that someone was planning to rob me then stated that I should talk to my adviser about a break that I already told him I could not take. The result was an overall grade of "D", my only "D". I was told that in July the school would begin to certify the grant I was approved for but the certification process began late because the previous instructor posted my grade at the very last moment, it was a B+.
I was given the disbursements from my loans but never got the grant money. With the loans, I did not have enough to pay for class. I was then told that it could take more than 120 days, previously I was told 30 to 60, to certify the grant. Now in September, the grant is still not certified and I was told that I need to pay for the classes out of pocket until it is and it is not guaranteed that I will receive the grant that I was approved for my the US Dept of Education and the University. Parallel to that, I am still trying to get my classes pushed out until 9/20. I am constantly emailing my academic adviser.
While going back and forth with financial aid about my grant, I mention that I am not ready for class to start. Truth be told, I am/was in therapy. My financial adviser told me the reason my academic adviser was not responding to my emails is because she was no longer my adviser and that my adviser changed. My old adviser did not tell me she was leaving and the new adviser never contacted me to let me know she would be my adviser. A mess. This University has stolen the joy I once had from gaining an education. They are the most unprofessional set of individuals I have ever encountered in a learning environment. I would get emails from my academic adviser, before the changes, saying we discussed this and that I was never able to talk to her.
Reviewed Sept. 15, 2010
I started my bachelors in Business back in May 2009 and from the very beginning, I was told I had full financial aide and would have to take out loans. I received a small discount for military, but that did not amount to anything. After I passed the first class, i was told that I was not financially able to start and therefore was a week late into the next class and behind. That class, I got a D-.
The next class, same situation--and they told me that the financial aide supposedly got ** up because they cut me a check for the remainder of it and I was supposed to give that back--$1,200 + $800 for the class I didn't take yet because they were late. I finally started 1 1/2 weeks late and was so far behind that I failed it.
Now that I said I withdrew, I am getting financial aid and loans again. I talked to finance and they told me that they would get back to me the next day. She said that I should not owe any money because they received their portion, and doesn't know why they had me owing. But that was 3 days ago. I have called her 8 times and emailed her--no response back. Beware of this school. They like to take money from you even when you don't have it.
Reviewed Sept. 13, 2010
I attended UOP for just over a year and did 30 credits worth of work. I felt that the education I was receiving was not up to par, so I withdrew as instructed by my adviser. I then started attending Lindenwood University. Lindenwood said that it needed to see my transcript to properly apply my credits. I contacted UOP to obtain my transcript. I was told that I was overpaid on a Pell Grant in the amount of $922.00 and that it must be paid before I could receive my credits.
About two weeks later, I received a bill from UOP through a bill collection agency in the amount of $4977.00. I was flabbergasted and contacted the company immediately. I was told by the company to pay the $922.00 but to dispute the other half in a letter with the payment. I told them that I would not pay on a bill with the wrong amount and was not willing to accept that I was liable for it.
From there the conversation took a bad turn and we were unable to resolve the issue. Since I received the bill, I have sent 38 e-mails and left several messages with the UOP financial adviser; as of this day, I still have not received any type of communication from them whatsoever.
Reviewed Sept. 13, 2010
I have just gone through what is the most horrific employment experience of my life! I was contacted by the University of Phoenix hiring department wanting to know if I would be interested in applying for the position of finance counselor. Having been recently laid off from my job in late May (a job I had held for eleven years), naturally I jumped at the chance to gain a new position. I was told I had more than enough education and experience for the position.
On August 23rd, I began a three week training program to teach me how each of the various programs worked. 1/2 way through, I was given a 'preliminary' test. To my disgust at myself, I failed! I picked myself up, dusted myself off, and began studying with a vengeance, even taking material home each evening to review. Lo and behold, the end of the course brought another test. To say I was nervous would be an understatement, as they had had me sign a paper prior to taking the test saying that should I fail again, I could be terminated.
OMG, I failed the second time around, even worse. I was horrified. I had even paid for a tutor to instruct me prior to the exam! I was pouring information in and I was getting dumber? Both my husband and I were shocked. Here I am, an individual with both a Bachelor and Master's degree, and I am so freaked out that I am unable to pass a pre-employment exam?
Again, I was called into 'the office' and asked to sign yet another form saying they were scheduling one more shorter test to see if I could possibly pass and, as before, if I failed, I could well be terminated. At this point, I am near panic! Between that day and the day of the exam, they would have one of their trainers work one on one with me for two solid days to address my obvious shortcomings. The first day was fantastic! I believe I learned more that one day than I had the whole previous training period. Surely, I would be in like Flin. After yet another day with this fantastic new trainer - wrong. When I arrived for my session on Friday, the day of the test scheduled for that afternoon, I was informed the trainer had 'other' things to do that day, but I should just spend the day studying and someone would come get my at 3:00 P.M. to take my test.
You know, I'm not an idiot, even I know that it is not very productive to attempt to tutor yourself. I will be frank, I was in such a panic that if they had given me questions on my own life, I probably would have gotten them wrong.
Failed again, was told to come back in the following Monday and HR would tell me what they had planned for me. What a miserable weekend! I again picked myself up, put on a happy face and went in to work. They let me sit in a room for two hours, came and got me, took me to yet another room, told me my services were not needed any longer, and I must turn in all material that I had in my workbook.
Now one might think, this woman is just sour grapes cause she isn't smart enough to get a job. That may well be the case, but I am still waiting for a return call from the University HR division to help me to understand why I paid them thousands and thousands of dollars to get my bachelor and masters degrees from them if I can't even get a job with them. The school that took my money! I have very real concerns now as to whether or not anyone will find my 'fake' degrees of any worth!
Reviewed Sept. 9, 2010
I have nothing but good to say about University of Phoenix. And for those of you who can't spell much less use proper grammar, it's no wonder you have had such an unpleasant experience. Going to school is work. We're not adults who need someone to hold our hands. For those who complain for having to pay for a class that you are re-taking because you failed it, what do you expect? You are taking it twice! Financial aid only pays for it once. It's not meant to pay for re-takes! It's that way at any university!
And for those who complain about taking courses that have nothing to do with your major, that's part of a college education. When you go to college, you get a well rounded education. It's that way at every university. Trust me; I've been to a traditional university before. Yes, some may have a legitimate complaint. Colleges are not perfect because people aren't perfect, and for you I wish the best!
Reviewed Sept. 8, 2010
I recently withdrew from my BSHS program at UOP and have been treated completely horrible since my decision to withdraw. I received my Associates degree with UOP along with my husband as well and had absolutely no problems with that program. I finished all my classes with no problems and my final GPA from my Associates program was a 3.0.
I started out with my Bachelor's degree fairly strong but quickly realized the Learning Teams were only added stress and I did not like the idea of my final grade reflecting the performance of other students. Many students only did the minimum while other students went above and beyond and it's not right that the student who only did the minimum got the same grade as the other students. In addition, it is also not right for a student who went over and beyond to receive a bad grade due to students who will not do what is required of them.
I also felt through the 5 week classes that I was not really learning much of anything. The work load is crazy and there was too much information and assignments crammed into 5 weeks, which made it impossible to come out of the class with much knowledge of it at all. If you compare my grades and GPA from my Associates degree to the year I took in my Bachelors program that tells it all. When I withdrew from UOP, I had already failed 3 classes and my GPA had dropped down to 2.49. Obviously UOP's Bachelor's program was not working out for me.
Now I am being held hostage by UOP because they decided to refund the money back to my lender for the 3 classes I failed and will not release any of my transcripts so I can finish my degree with another school. I currently have a balance of almost $5,000 with UOP. My lender did not request the money back, UOP chose to refund the money back to my lender and ** me on obtaining my education goal. My family has paid them well over $50,000 over the past four years and now they are holding me hostage over $5,000. I tried enrolling with Kaplan University to start my bachelor's degree completely over but could not finish the enrollment process because I needed an official transcript for my Associates degree, you know, the program I completed and paid for through UOP and they would not release it due to my owed balance.
I have received letter after letter from UOP stating how important my education is to their University. If this is indeed true, then UOP would release my Associates degree transcript so I can continue my education. I would not recommend anybody to attend this college especially the Bachelor's degree program until some changes are made. Their instructors are complete jokes as well; some of them are so strict with their grading they should be teaching grad students not undergrads.
Two of my failed classes were basically due to team assignment grades which I truly think is horrible. Nobody's final grade should reflect the performance of another student's work. This school seriously needs to be looked into and evaluated. I have an Associates Degree and only a year of my bachelor's program completed. I cannot continue my education until my balance is paid in full because they will not release my transcripts to any other school. So, as of right now, UOP has caused me to fail my education goals in obtaining my BSHS degree.
Reviewed Sept. 8, 2010
University of Phoenix keeps delaying my disbursement of my Pell grant. I talked to other students who said that they were told the policy of the school is that you are supposed to get your disbursement after every 4 classes you attend, which I have done and now, they are telling me to wait 3 weeks more till the end of the month. By then, I will be into my 5th class. What the heck is going on? I don't like the way they do the billing, very confusing to the average person to understand. I think they make it confusing on purpose so that no one knows how to understand their accounting and therefore, cannot question the weird accounting practices of UOP. I feel like my counselor is just lying to me, she doesn't sound sincere and she sounds like she's only interested in the commission she's going to get for keeping me enrolled.
Reviewed Sept. 5, 2010
Like many working adults, they want to better themselves by obtaining a degree but are unable to attend a brick and mortar University so the online courses are more in line with many working adults. Only to find so many are being taking advantage of. Universities gain funds from the government while the student is left holding the debt bag with a less than favorable degree that most employers turn their heads on.
Left with 40,000 in private student loan debt and 50,000 in federal loan debt. Achieved a degree in Business Marketing. Employers look at University of Phoenix as a dis credible school, where many think they will obtain a good paying career.
Reviewed Sept. 3, 2010
Do not even think about attending this school which is a complete rip off and fraud! They charge almost $1800 per 3-week class and tell you that you need at least 12 classes and charge you up front! They take your school loan whether you attend or not! My daughter went to this school and they pressured her into signing up right away! She is 18 and signed everything they wanted her to, until she realized the classes were all online! It was a scam and a rip off.
Here we are almost 2 years later and still trying to get them to cancel the loans they took out on her for over $6,000! They refuse to return the total amount, even 2 years later! Of course, who can we complain to? We called Sallie Mae and the rep on the other end of the line sounded as if we woke him up from his nap!
Do not attend this school unless you want to pay at least 3 times the amount you would at a full blown university! Do the math, people, a 3-week class for $1800, times 12 classes. You may as well go to Harvard or Princeton, at least you will have a prestigious diploma, not like this online diploma factory. University of Phoenix is a joke, and I hope they go out of business.
Reviewed Sept. 2, 2010
I have completed 3 blocks of classes. I began another block on Aug. 23. I was contacted in July 2010 to fax my signed tax forms and financial aid worksheet, so that I could receive my grant and loan by the time that school began. I immediately sent the requested forms. On Sept. 01, 2010, I called my financial counselor to inquire about my pell grant, because I saw that my loans were already disbursed. I was told that because my classes started in Aug. that I would not receive a pell grant. I was upset because I feel that someone could have informed me of this before I had to take it upon myself and call.
I am now trying to withdraw, but have been told that this may not be what I want to do. I feel as though there are some fishy things going on, because most of the questions that I asked, I only received the statement, "Government funds are not guaranteed". That is correct if the government denies you, but when they approve you, that's not the government's fault. It's the fault of the person that's withholding your money.
This has caused me economic damage because I now owe more money for loans, when I could have received a grant and taken out less in loans. I lost my job in March 2010 and that's when I decided to go back to school. I had no idea that I would be going through such things. I have defended this school with family and friends, but I guess I was wrong. I really don't want to conduct business with this institute any longer. I want to continue my education, but I don't know how, due to withdrawal penalties.
Reviewed Sept. 2, 2010
I am a member of the UOP. I have been, since May of 2008. I have finished my associates degree in business, and started my BA in Aug 2010. I too have had some very bad experiences with them. So bad, that I wrote to the president of the United States. I have lots of trouble with my academic counselor, financial counselor, and support from this school. I keep track of all my loans and disbursements. The school is taking more money than they should, and what was remaining they took.
I could have send that back, to pay off part of my loan. I fought with them. I had trouble in my class, because of an instructor, it was my Geology class, who was incorporating her own rules as she went along. I too was not following APA guidelines, that I had been using from the very beginning, I would submit an assignment and she would give it back with a very low grade. It was like this, the assignment would say to describe an orange ( example), I would describe what she wanted, but then she would turn it back with a D, because I didn't describe what the smell was. Things were graded low because she said I didn't complete my assignment, when I called to get help with this instructor, it was 7 weeks into this class. I was told that I could fight the grade if I didn't like it.
My concern mostly was, the other students who got stuck with this instructor. My academic counselor would not give me the information I was asking for, and ignored my emails. I feel like I am paying for these classes. They need to basically be there for me, right? Well, wrong. UOP sucks. They do mistreat their students, and they rip us off. I asked my financial counselor for the financial department number, he said I couldn't have it.
They owe me about $2500 dollars, and said they have to take part of my Pell grant because I still owe them money. Get this **, in order for me to get my certificate of my diploma, I have to ask for it, and it is not an automatic thing. Then to find out how to get it, was like pulling someone's teeth out. I have so many friends who also go to this school, who have dropped out, been accused of plagiarism, and ripped off just like me. How can I get the help I need? I want my money back! The school owes me money. They still say I have to pay out of my Pell grant money, and they wont let me talk to anyone to resolve this issue. Please help!
Reviewed Sept. 1, 2010
Last February I contacted my financial adviser regarding my disbursement of the remaining financial aid and Pell grant money. I told her I was planning to move from Wyoming to Colorado to help out family. I was told I would be receiving over $ 7,000 by mid March. In the beginning of March, 2010 I called again to double check what I had been told. I was assured that the information I was given was accurate and to go ahead with my move. I used what I had in savings for the move expecting the money I was assured would be deposited into my account would be there as promised.
When the money never showed up I called again to see what the issue was. It took multiple calls and e-mails to finally get a response. I was then told that I had a new financial adviser and that the old one had been mistaken and that the money I was supposed to receive went to pay for my remaining classes. Since I graduate in October 2010 I could see where that made sense. I explained I was assured that money and now I had nothing left because I used what I had in savings for the move. I went instantly in debt about $2,400. I was assured that my remaining classes were paid for with the remainder of my Pell grant and my financial aid.
Now I am being told I owe the school for the class I am in now and the previous class because my financial aid and grant money did not cover it when I was told several times previously it had! Now I am being told my next couple of remaining classes are not covered either and was asked to reapply for more financial aid! I asked for a detailed statement detailing how much money the school has received on my behalf and where the money was spent or how it was used. I have to receive that statement! I reapplied for financial aid as well and have yet to hear the outcome of that.
I only have a few courses left to finish my degree and I am worried I may not have the financial resources to do. I was told on several occasions that all of my remaining classes had been covered with the money I was supposed to receive from the school in March, and now I am being told that is not the case but when I ask where the money went I get no response! I too would like to join a class action suit against the University Of Phoenix and I would also like to warn others not to attend this school! I am in collections for unpaid bills because of the money I was told I could count on from the school never coming in. Also now I am in debt to the school because the money I was told I would be receiving actually went to pay for my remaining classes and that turned out to be false as well. So where did the money go? I have asked and they have ignored all requests for detailed statements.
University of Phoenix Company Information
- Company Name:
- University of Phoenix
- Year Founded:
- 1976
- Address:
- 4035 S. Riverpoint Parkway
- City:
- Phoenix
- State/Province:
- AZ
- Postal Code:
- 85040
- Country:
- United States
- Website:
- www.phoenix.edu
