Warnborough College
Type | Private, for-profit |
---|---|
Established | 1973, 1997, 2006 |
Chairman | John Allen |
President | Brenden D. Tempest-Mogg |
Vice-president | Julian Ng |
Location | Canterbury, Kent, UK Dublin, Ireland |
The name Warnborough is associated with several related institutions of higher education existing from 1973 to the present, including Warnborough College Oxford, Warnborough College UK, Warnborough College Ireland and Warnborough University, some of which are no longer in operation. Warnborough College UK provides educational programmes both on-site in Canterbury, England, and by distance learning. Warnborough College Ireland offers distance-learning programmes from Ireland. Warnborough College has been the subject of multiple controversies relating to misrepresentation, education quality, legal and tax troubles, and eligibility to participate in government financial assistance.
History
1973–1996: Oxford
Warnborough College was founded in Oxford, England, in 1973 by Brenden Tempest-Mogg, an Australian[1] who had attended Hertford College, University of Oxford, in 1970.[2] Warnborough College was not affiliated with the University of Oxford. It offered study abroad programmes and catered largely to American undergraduate and graduate students spending a semester or year abroad as part of their academic programme.[3] Other offerings included Warnborough College International Summer Schools[4] and a venue for summer conferences.[5] It was founded on Warnborough Road in North Oxford and in 1976 moved to Boars Hill, about four miles south from the city of Oxford.[2]
In 1985, Warnborough College began the Warnborough Australian Studies Programmes for studies in Sydney and Brisbane, Australia.[6] The nine American students who enrolled for the initial semester characterized the program as an "egregious academic dodge" in which they were misled as to their access to facilities at the University of Sydney and University of Queensland, and in which their lecturers were misled that the students were from Oxford University instead of American colleges.[7]
In 1995, Warnborough College Oxford enrolled its first group of students onsite in a four-year US academic programme, which created significant controversy and litigation that led to its closure and liquidation the following year.[8][9]
1997–2005: London and Canterbury
In 1997 Warnborough University was registered as a limited company in Ireland, directed by Brenden Tempest-Mogg and Kee Guan Ng, a Malaysian national[1] with a registered branch office in the United Kingdom. It initially operated an office in London and later moved to Canterbury in 2001. It offered graduate and undergraduate residential and non-residential degrees in liberal arts, scientific and professional studies.[10] In November 2005 Ireland's Department of Education and Science said that Warnborough University in Ireland was in breach of the Universities Act 1997 by calling itself a university and requested that they not use the word "university".[11] Earlier in 2005, the inclusion of Warnborough and other unauthorized degree providers on a UK Department for Education and Skills (DFES) list of "genuine" education providers was described as an "embarrassment" to DFES.[12]
Affiliates
Warnborough represented to the US Department of Education during its termination hearings in 1996 that, at the time, its degrees were actually issued by the controversial and unaccredited Greenwich University (Norfolk Island), with which it had a contractual arrangement to do so. Warnborough was represented in the DOE hearings by John Walsh of Brannagh, Chancellor of Greenwich.[13][14]
Warnborough was formerly in an academic partnership with Saint Theresa's Medical University (STMU) for automatic admission to STMU of holders of Warnborough College (UK) Pre-Medical diplomas and issuance of dual degrees by STMU with Warnborough College (IE).[15][16][17] The Oregon Office of Degree Authorization characterized STMU as being jointly operated with Warnborough.[18]
In the early 2000s Warnborough University generated controversy in Australia because neither Warnborough nor any of its consortium partners through which it was offering graduate and undergraduate degrees were accredited to do so.[19][20] The Australian state of New South Wales included Warnborough on a list of five "unrecognized universities".[21]
Buildings and sites
From 1976 to 1996, Warnborough College Oxford, was located at the former facilities of Plater College (which had relocated to Headington), the Bishop's palace of the Diocese of Oxford, and Yatscombe Hall, on Boar's Hill. The Boars Hill facilities were used for teaching, administration and accommodations,[22] and were characterized by the Financial Times as "a grotty campus on the outskirts of town".[23] After the college was liquidated and the property repossessed, the site was occupied by squatters. The site was subject to planning disputes for over a decade thereafter.[24] Yatscombe Hall was destroyed by fire in December 2003[25] and all the buildings on the site were demolished. A retirement village was planned for the site,[26] but eventually a development of a four large country homes was built instead by Millgate Homes.[27]
From 2006 to 2008, Warnborough College Ireland rented offices from the former All Hallows College in Drumcondra but All Hallows said it would not renew Warnborough's lease after August 2008.[1] In February 2008, the Irish Independent reported that All Hallows officials were concerned about the college's presence on All Hallows' grounds.[1] At All Hallows' request, Warnborough removed photographs of All Hallows from its website.[1]
Organisation
Warnborough College UK is located in Canterbury, Kent. When it was inspected in May 2012 by the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) for Private Further Education, it was reported to have 59 students, of which the vast majority were foreign students on Tier 4 Visas, principally from Asia, of which only four had English as their first language.[28]
Warnborough College UK is designated by the Accreditation Service for International Colleges as an "ASIC Premier College".,[29] which permits its students to obtain short-term study visas in the UK, but such accreditation is not recognized for any other purpose.[30]
Warnborough College Ireland has an office in Dublin.
Warnborough College Ireland is not accredited by any known organization. Warnborough College Ireland courses are not recognised by Ireland's Department of Education, the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC) or the National Qualifications Authority of Ireland (NQAI). In February 2008, Sean O'Foghlu, chief executive of NQAI told the Irish Independent that because Warnborough College is not a recognised higher education institution or awarding body the qualifications are "effectively worthless".[1]
In July 2008, HETAC denied the college's application for accreditation.[31] Warnborough sought leave to take judicial review of the denial[32] but withdrew its appeal in November 2008 after HETAC agreed to permit Warnborough to submit a new accreditation application.[33]
The Oregon Office of Degree Authorization named Warnborough in its former list of unaccredited universities, with its then administrator, Alan Contreras, characterising Warnborough College as "a diploma mill that has managed to move back and forth between Britain and Ireland for decades without either government's being able to put an end to it."[34][35][18]
Controversy
Warnborough operated without significant controversy until the 1980s, when it began offering postgraduate programs. In 1987, BBC Radio broadcast a 25-minute long expose, revealing that Warnborough had no authority to issue degrees, and characterized Warnborough as a "nightmare" of low academic standards, inadequate teaching, high cost, and poor facilities and living conditions. In the aftermath of the BBC report, enrollment declined drastically, creating a financial crisis because Warnborough had taken out a $2 million high-interest loan, which could only be paid off by recruiting more students. In 1995, Warnborough decided to recruit graduating high-school students, holding itself out as a four-year college.[8][9]
When the first class of American, Russian and Japanese 4-year students arrived in 1995 several American students alleged that Warnborough misled them into believing it was affiliated with Oxford University.[36] When students discovered that Warnborough had no connection with Oxford University about fifteen or twenty of them - roughly half the new enrollment, immediately withdrew from the college with some intending to sue for refunds.[36][37] The college denied that it had claimed any association with Oxford University.[36] Those students who remained discovered that, because Warnborough was not accredited, the credits for their classes were not transferable.[8][9] The Financial Times stated that all the students were "victims of an elaborate scam".[23]
Although the college continued to deny any misrepresentation, Oxford University threatened Warnborough College with a lawsuit over these alleged misrepresentations[37] and the Washington State Higher Education Coordinating Board sued Warnborough.[22][36] The lawsuit resulted in a judgement against Warnborough College by the Superior Court of King County, Washington of nearly $300,000.[38] Warnborough never paid the restitution ordered by the Court.[8][9]
On 4 October 1995 the United States Department of Education took emergency action against[39][13] and then, in 1996, terminated the eligibility of Warnborough College to participate in the federal student financial assistance programmes under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 on the basis that it was not a degree-granting foreign institution; its credits were not freely transferable to eligible US universities; and it had no eligible one-year vocational programmes.[13] It also fined the college $40,000 for failing to make refunds to students in accord with Title IV and for misrepresentations to students.[13]
Hertford College was reported to be pursuing legal action against Warnborough College to recover a property rental debt of 6,000 pounds.[40] Other creditors hired a private detective to track down the principals after they returned to Australia.[2][41][42] The Boars Hill properties were repossessed by creditors and its corporate owner, Oxford International Educational Enterprises Ltd, directed by brothers Brenden and Daryl Tempest-Mogg and their mother, Ethel Tempest-Mogg, was wound up in a petition by the Inland Revenue.[2] In 1996, Warnborough relocated temporarily to offices rented from the New Road Baptist Church in central Oxford.[2] The Tempest-Moggs returned to Australia in July 1996 and the New Road office closed in August 1996.[2] In October 1996 Warnborough went into liquidation.[41]
See also
- British Council
- Educational accreditation
- Independent Schools Inspectorate
- UK Visas and Immigration
- Accreditation Service for International Colleges
References
- ^ a b c d e f Phelan, Shane; Walshe, John (26 November 2012), "College charges €18,000 fees for 'useless' degrees", Irish Independent
- ^ a b c d e f King, Tim (25 October 1996). "Oxford College Sued in US is Repossessed". The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Queensland Courier-Mail, 10 November 1993, Residential Property section, p. 35.
- ^ Donner, Suzanne (18 January 1981), "Vacationing at an Overseas University", The New York Times, retrieved 27 May 2010
- ^ "The Dreaming Spires Awaken", The Guardian, 19 February 1990
- ^ "Warnborough College Overview". From Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 8 December 2000. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Kamp, David (September 1992), Europe on Three Credits a Day, Spy
- ^ a b c d Levin, Josh (23 November 2021). "One Year: 1995 Fake Oxford". Slate.
- ^ a b c d Levin, Josh (23 November 2021). "One Year: 1995 Fake Oxford - Transcript". Slate.
- ^ Bear, John, Bear's Guide to Earning Degrees by Distance Learning, 15th Ed (2003) p.223
- ^ "Exposed: scandal of the bogus degrees", Irish Independent, 14 November 2005
- ^ "Embarrassment at DFES over official college list". Times Higher Education. 1 April 2005.
- ^ a b c d "In Re Warnborough College, US Dept of Education Docket Nos. 95-164-ST, 96-60-SF" (PDF). 9 August 1996.
- ^ Cohen, David (17 January 2003). "Australia Bans Online Institution". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
- ^ "STMU Dual Degree Program". Archived from the original on 7 February 2008.
- ^ "STMU Dual Degree Program". Archived from the original on 18 November 2007.
- ^ "Health Study FAQ's" ACS Distance Education
- ^ a b "Unaccredited colleges". Oregon Student Assistance Commission, Office of Degree Authorization. Archived from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
- ^ Questions on Notice (3 April 2001)
- ^ "Lawnham, Patrick, "Authorities plan crackdown on Clayton's Degrees", The Australian, Ed 1 p 31 (13 March 2002)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2008. Retrieved 27 January 2009.
- ^ Brown, George, "Protecting Australia’s Higher Education System: A Proactive versus Reactive Approach in Review (1999–2004), Proceedings of the Australian Universities Quality Forum 2004
- ^ a b Gilje, Shelby (1 October 1995). "Students find Warnborough is not a part of Oxford". The Seattle Times.
- ^ a b Sturges, Fiona (2 January 2022). "History podcast One Year brings 1995 back into focus". Financial Times. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
- ^ "MP bids to break deadlock", Oxford Mail, 7 February 2004
- ^ "Fire Destroys Former College", BBC News Online, 9 December 2003
- ^ "Village for elderly planned for Boars Hill", Oxford Times, 23 June 2006
- ^ Boar's Hill Archived 29 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Millgate Homes, United Kingdom.
- ^ "Warnborough College Inspection May 2012". UK Independent Schools Inspectorate. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
- ^ "UK Institution Directory". Accreditation Service for International Schools, Colleges and Universities. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- ^ "Affiliations and Credentials". Accreditation Service for International Schools, Colleges and Universities. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- ^ O'Sullivan, Sarah, "Authorities refuse to recognize web college", The Sunday Times, 18 July 2008[dead link ]
- ^ Phelan, Shan; Walshe, John (15 September 2008). "Legal war looms in college's battle for approval". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012.
- ^ "College Will Fight on for Recognition", Irish Independent, 11 November 2008
- ^ Contreras, Alan (Winter 2009). "The complexity of international quality control". International Higher Education (54). Archived from the original on 1 August 2012.
- ^ Contreras, Alan (30 May 2008). "International quality control is no easy task". Chronicle of Higher Education.
- ^ a b c d Lyall, Sarah (2 October 1995). "Americans Say a College Near Oxford Duped Them". The New York Times.
- ^ a b O'Leary, John; Charter, David (3 October 1995). "US students say college misled them over link with Oxford" (PDF). The Times (London).
- ^ "News in Brief: State Capitols Roundup". Education Week. 12 March 1997.
- ^ "In Re Warnborough College, US Dept of Education Docket No 95-146-EA" (PDF). 6 December 1995.
- ^ Susan, Pritikin (31 October 1996). "College? What College?". Cherwell (Oxford, UK). Archived from the original on 22 May 1997.
- ^ a b "College that lured U.S. students goes bust", The Times (London), 29 October 1996
- ^ Phelan, Shane "Chequered history of controversial college" Irish Independent (15 February 2008)