![]() The for-profit college is tight on cash and earlier this year indicated to investors there is "substantial doubt" it would survive another 12 months. NAU did not immediately return a request for comment that Education Dive emailed to its CEO Ronald Shape on Friday. They contend the university said credits would transfer that ultimately didn't programs lasted longer and cost more than anticipated high employee turnover affected the quality of instruction no administrative staff were available for students taking evening classes, "despite express promises that there would be" and a lack of transparency on costs.Īdditionally, the lawsuit contends, NAU "trained and deployed an army of aggressive, persistent enrollment advisors" to draw students. In the latest lawsuit, students put forth a set of allegations that National American left them with a "worthless" education and "crippling" debt. The attorneys leading the lawsuit previously sued Wright Career College, a former technical college based in Kansas, that grew to include 264 students and eventually won $3 million in damages.
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