Lawsuit Takes Aim at College’s Billing Practices for Study Abroad
TAMAR LEWIN, New York Times
March 09, 2008
NORTON, Mass. — A month after graduating from
Wheaton College, Jennifer Bombasaro-Brady was back on campus urging the student
government to ask the state attorney general to investigate the college’s
billing practices for students studying abroad.
Ms. Bombasaro-Brady, who spent a semester in
South Africa on a program run by the School for International Training, said
Wheaton forced her family to pay full Wheaton tuition, room and board — more
than $21,000 that semester — even though the program cost $4,439 less.
“I had an amazing time in South Africa, and I
wouldn’t change the experience for anything in the world,” Ms. Bombasaro-Brady
said. “But it doesn’t seem right that I was living in a place with no heat, no
hot water, no electricity, no Internet, and paying the cost of my dorm room
here.”
Wheaton is not the only institution to charge
home tuition and fees to students who study abroad on programs that cost
thousands of dollars less. But because of Ms. Bombasaro-Brady’s family, it is
the one facing litigation on the pricing question.
In a closely watched lawsuit, filed last month
in Massachusetts state court, her father, James Brady, said Wheaton’s policy of
pocketing the difference between the cost of a study-abroad program and the full
Wheaton tuition was a deceptive practice.
“On the Web site, Wheaton says it will charge
full tuition for approved programs,” said Mr. Brady, a lawyer from Hingham,
Mass., who filed the suit. “But they don’t give you any information about the
actual cost, so you don’t find out about the hidden charge they’re pocketing.”
In court and out, the relationship between
universities and the study-abroad programs they use is coming under new
scrutiny. In January, the New York attorney general’s office sent subpoenas to
15 universities seeking data about how they administer their study-abroad
programs and whether they receive cash bonuses, junkets or other perks for
steering students to particular programs. The Connecticut attorney general is
also looking at university practices.
“We are doing a wide-ranging investigation of
campus conduct that impacts middle-class students,” said Benjamin Lawsky, a
special assistant to the New York attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo. “We’re
looking at the financial relationships and the pricing.”
Wheaton, like other colleges with similar
policies, defends its study-abroad charges.
“We feel our policies are completely
appropriate, and we believe they’re clear,” said Michael Graca, a spokesman for
Wheaton.
Wheaton says its pricing system for study
abroad is consistent with its overall approach to tuition, under which students
pay the same fee whether they take expensive courses like science labs or
cheaper ones like literature surveys. The college also says its system allows it
to award financial aid to help needy students study abroad. And even when an
outside program handles everything overseas, Wheaton’s global education office
provides orientation and counseling, the college says.
The issue has landed in the spotlight as study
abroad becomes increasingly common; nearly a quarter-million college students
went overseas last year, up from fewer than 90,000 in 1995-6, according to the
Institute of International Education. For colleges, the trend presents financial
challenges.
A college’s fixed costs do not go down when
students leave for a semester, and some institutions have many empty beds during
the spring semester, the most popular study-abroad time. A few colleges,
including Middlebury, admit first-year students midyear to help fill those beds.
But Middlebury does not charge full tuition for those who leave campus.
“We have parents pay the study-abroad programs
directly, so they pay the cost of the program they choose,” said Jeffrey Cason,
Middlebury’s dean of international programs.
How colleges charge for study abroad varies
widely. Some, like Wheaton, charge full home tuition, room and board. Some, like
Columbia, charge full tuition, but not room and board. Others, like Middlebury,
let students pay the program directly. And many tack on an additional
study-abroad fee, ranging from $200 to $2,000.
“Institutions are investing much more in study
abroad, the field is becoming professionalized, and that means it costs more
money,” said Brian J. Whalen, president of the Forum on Education Abroad at
Dickinson College, which recently issued study abroad guidelines emphasizing the
need for cost transparency but not mandating any particular pricing system.
A recent forum survey shows that the most
common arrangement is for families to pay the study-abroad programs directly,
avoiding the home tuition.
Mr. Brady said he tried to negotiate such an
arrangement for his daughter but was told by the study-abroad office to pay full
tuition, under protest, or risk her not receiving credit for the semester.
“They tell you that if you go on the very same
program yourself and don’t do it through the school, they won’t give you the
credits,” Mr. Brady said. “I think that’s holding the credits hostage.”
Colleges say they have a responsibility to make
sure they are not awarding credit for low-quality programs. But parents complain
that colleges often refuse credit for programs that are identical to the
approved ones, or even for programs with higher academic ratings than those the
colleges have approved.
So the Brady lawsuit resonates with many
parents and students. Katelyn Brewer, who spent one semester of her junior year
at Wheaton in Paris and the other in Dublin, said she resented paying Wheaton
more than $36,000 that year, when Boston University, which ran the program,
charged only $26,000 for them.
“I asked the person in the global education
office couldn’t I just do the programs on my own and pay B.U. directly, but she
said no, if I did that, I wouldn’t get credit,” said Ms. Brewer, who graduated
last year. “So I took out extra loans. Now, a year out, I’m interning and
waitressing and trying to find a job in my field, and I have about $600 a month
to pay back. I loved Wheaton, but I don’t think their study-abroad charges are
fair.”
Some parents who are currently paying full
tuition while their children study abroad in cheaper programs said they were
rooting for the Brady family.
But at the Wheaton student government meeting
concerning Ms. Bombasaro-Brady’s request to approach the state attorney general,
students worried over what might happen if the lawsuit were successful or if the
state got involved. Would Wheaton go bankrupt? Would tuition go up? Would fewer
students be able to study abroad? In the end, they voted to table the issue.
“This resolution is not appropriate for us to
deal with,” said Jonathan Wolinsky, a student senator. “We are treading into
waters that are not ours to enter. This relates to Wheaton in a manner I do not
want to touch with a 10-foot pole.”
Source:
http://www.instituteforlegalreform.org/media/displayarticle.cfm?artid=ILLI3714582625
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