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There have been a lot of edits to this answer. As a supervisor, I've independently verified that the answer below is substantially correct and am locking the answer to keep shills from changing it further.

Note that "PSU" below refers to the diploma mill "Phoenix State University", not to any other schools which may share the same initials (Pennsylvania State University, Pittsburg State University, etc.) or any other school it might be confused with (Arizona State University in Phoenix AZ, the University of Phoenix (which despite being an explicitly for-profit school does have accreditations that are traceable back to the USDoE/CHEA), etc.).

Gregg DesElms originally made a very complete and accurate answer to the question. Someone then came in after him and removed it, replacing it with the following, as if to make it look like DesElms had written it:

By court order, I am required to post the following: "I previously posted negative information about PSU without ever taking a course, from my own web research. Some of what I posted was not true. PSU is accredited independently. Please visit PSUanswers.com for the complete discussion of accreditation. PSU credentials are valid for successful licensure, trade acceptance, wholesale buying, bonding, insurance and many other benefits in many trades."

Gregg DesElms now writes:

The above statement has been added, obviously, by someone who has a vested interest in this institution. No court anywhere has ordered anyone -- least of all me -- to make any such statement. It is, simply, a lie.

Because it's clearly intended to look as if I wrote it, I'm sure I could have just deleted it without violating the rules of this place, but I wanted the reader to see the tactics and lengths to which diploma mill operators will go to deceive.

And let's be painfully clear: PSU is not "accredited independently." It's not accredited at all. Period. Neither are its credentials good for any kind of licensing, anywhere on the planet... or in the universe, I'll bet. It's a rip-off. A scam. Do not be fooled.

After I posted the below some time ago, someone who obviously didn't like my exposing the institution as a diploma mill came here and completely deleted it... leaving only the above "court order" silliness, as if to make it look like I had written said above... as if I were the one under some kind of court order.

Here's what I originally wrote: If you're inquiring about the entity found here:

http:/www.e-psu.com

or here

http:/www.phoenixstateuniversity.org

then the answer is, emphatically, "NO, it is NOT accredited!"

This completely fake institution claims accreditation from an agency (a completely fake accreditor), the web site is clearly of its own making; and it claims affiliation with a church the web site of which is clearly of its own making.

In the United States, an agency is generally not an educational accreditor unless it is approved by the US Secretary of Education, which is who heads-up the US Department of Education (USDE). The agency approved by USDE to oversee and manage pretty much everything that has anything to do with educational accreditation in the US is the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). Once you know what I've written in the above paragraph, figuring out which institutions are accredited, and which are not -- and also figuring out which accreditors are legitimate, and which are not -- is really simple. As long as you remember the two things I'm about to write, below, you needn't ever again go to forums or chat rooms or blogs or email lists and ask if a given institution, or its accreditor, is legitimate.

Simply, a given accreditor (or alleged accreditor), or a given accredited (or allegedly accredited) school isn't listed on the CHEA web site, then it's got nothing to do with legitimate, government-approved accreditation. Period.

List of the four types of accreditors http:/chea.org/Directories/index.asp

Search CHEA database of accredited schools http:/chea.org/search

Search the USDE database of accredited schools

http://ope.ed.gov/accreditation

The debate/argument between those who believe that proper, government-approved accreditation (such as that discussed on the CHEA web site) is the only right way to do things, and those who believe that schools can be legitimate and still not accredited, is an intense and sometimes ugly one. It's true that there are excellent -- and I mean really excellent -- schools out there that are unaccredited. Just because a given school isn't accredited dooesn't mean it isn't still good... sometimes quite good. But the problem is that without accreditation, there's no way to really tell in any meaningful and objective way whether the unaccredited school is really any good. And, of course, accredited colleges and universities (as well as many employers and government agencies) will typically not recognize credits or degrees from unaccredited schools.

In the end, even though there may very well be really good unaccredited schools which issue respectable credentials, the only way to ensure that you will never have to worry about how your degree will be received is to make sure that the institution which issues it is accredited.

As long as a given college or university is listed on the CHEA web site (e.g., searchable in its database), then it's accredited. Be advised that there are different types of accreditation, which you can also learn about on the CHEA web site. The most common type is "regional" accreditation, but there are three other types, as can be seen on the CHEA web site. When making decisions about which accredited institution to attennd, be sure that you understand the ultimate usefulness of its particular type of accreditation.

PHOENIX STATE UNIVERSITY is obviously trying to pull a fast one. Even if its certificates are legitimate (e.g., even if they require legitimate work and can't simply be purchased, as with a diploma mill), the fact that it touts a completely fake accreditor -- the web site of which is of its own creation (indicating, simply, that the accreditor is owned by the same people who own the "university") -- is proof enough of its shifty ways.

LOCKSMITH COMMENT:

I checked on PSU's statement that they offer the only "bonding" service for locksmiths and this is partially true. You can now only get bonded through Locksmith Ledger, ASLPA.org or Phoenix State as a locksmith, due to many banks and AIG withdrawing surety for honor bonds. So, they are one of three that offer bonding, not the "only" one. The bigger issue is that ALL these online schools have immense issues. If you Google "XXX Scams" and fill in the blank for ANY online school, trade oriented or not, you will find terrible complaints. PSU charges several hundred for their courses, whereas, for example, the University of Phoenix ("accredited") actually puts liens on your house, takes out loans on top of your Pell, and many other surprising tactics.

Our daughter took a locksmith course there, and she got an 866 number with her enrollment package, which was in South Dakota.

Someone else then added to what DesElms wrote:

What you say above is for the most part true. However, many private and state universities etc are not accredited in the manner that you speak of . As for the Dept of Education, in my experience their main concern is qualifying institutions in order to receive federal money. Their list of accredited universities, colleges, etc is mainly based on their own system of accreditation which is based upon who is receiving federal monies which is based on those that are accredited by any accreditation organization etc, etc. They also played a major roll in instituting on line courses from all state institutions or institutions receiving any monies from the federal government.

As for PSU, you are correct, they are a scam. Disregard the accreditation; any web site that does not include a contact telephone number is a scam. Sounds good, in fact to good to be true. Any ordained pastor can and does counsel but hardly ever for money.

DesElms then responded:

What I wrote is not merely "for the most part true." It is completely true. Accreditation is one of my consultative areas of expertise. People PAY me to help them understand it. And I am an avowed anti-diploma mill activist who does not suffer fools where this sort of thing is concerned. So please forgive me for these efforts of mine to make absolutely sure that the answer to this question is absolutely correct; and that no one is mislead... either by answers directly related to the question, or by related subjects which have susequently cropped-up herein.

Very few truly credible educational institutions are unaccredited (though, it's true that some are); and NO educational institution which claims to be "accredited" by anything other than a USDE- and/or CHEA-approved agency is credible. Any educational institution which claims accreditation by anything other than a USDE- and/or CHEA-approved agency is trying to pull the wool over everyone's eyes. It cannot be trusted... for ANYTHING.

The rest of what the above person wrote is not really even understandable to me. It's not about qualifying institutions to receive federal money. And it's not about some kind of meaningless criterion of "their own system of accreditation" which is based merely on who's receiving federal money, or who's accredited by what agency, or anything of that sort which doesn't seem to have anything to do with the quality of what is taught, and how it is taught. It's not anywhere NEAR as simple (and seemingly pointless) as that.

It also has nothing to do with "instituting on line courses from all state institutions or institutions receiving any monies from the federal government," or whatever that even means.

People throw-around the term "accredited" or "accreditation" quite loosely in the United States... and often wrongly. In my opinion, it should be a protected word, like "lawyer" or "attorney" which cannot be used in any kind of print unless it is referring to accreditation by an agency approved by the US Department of Education (USDE) and/or the Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). Nothing else qualifies as "accreditation." Nothing.

With the exception of the state of New York, which has special dispensation from the USDE for accrediation purposes (and even then, only in a certain way), NO US STATE ACCREDITS. Period. States can approve an educational institution to exist... even to issue degrees (though, when so, I think it's a bad idea until and unless said institution is finally actually accredited). But the state, by so doing, does not "accredit." And no entity other than those approved by USDE and/or CHEA may "accredit." Anything not approved by USDE and/or CHEA is little more than a nefarious "accreditation mill."

That said, as is true with educational institutions which are so new that they haven't had a chance to be accredited yet, there may be agencies out there which claim to "accredit" and which haven't yet been approved by USDE and/or CHEA. However, if they're TRULY legitimate, then they will not call what they do "accreditation" until they have finally been approved as an accreditor by USDE and/or CHEA.

It's that way with educational institutions, too: Unaccredited educational institutions which are nevertheless credible, and which plan on becoming accredited and are only waiting until they've been in business long enough that they can finally apply to be accredited, will usually not call their credentials "degrees." And they will explain that they don't want to use that word to describe what they award to students who complete their programs until they are actually accredited by a USDE- and/or CHEA-approved agency. Until that happens, they may call their awards "certificates" or "diplomas" or something like that. That is the honorable way to handle it.

Accreditors which haven't yet been approved to accredit by USDE and/or CHEA, but which are nevertheless credible, will usually avoid using the word "accredt" to describe what they do. They'll use the word "approve" instead... at least until they're finally USDE and/or CHEA approved.

It is the common ploy of those who just refuse to accept what accreditation really and truly is, and what it really and truly accoomplishes, to somehow denigrate the accreditation system, or the USDE; and/or to try to reduce what it all means to a simple matter of being a mere technicality so that either institutions or students (or both) can get federal money or financial aid. While that is, in fact, part of it, it's far, far more (and far, far more consequential) than merely that.

USDE- and/or CHEA-approved accreditation, more than anything else, is about ensuring that what's taught, and how it's taught, meets certain minimum standards so that courses taught at one accredited school may be easily and safely transferred to other accredited schools; and so that degrees issued by one accredited school may be used as requisite to higher-level degrees offered by other accredited schools.

Accreditation is also about ensuring that all accredited schools are financially solvent, and conform to good and safe financial and management standards.

Accreditation is also about ensuring that all teachers, professors, etc., are fully qualified to teach the courses that they teach; to ensure that their degrees are from properly accredited institutions; and that said degrees truly prepare the instructor to teach the course(s) s/he teaching. And that there are enough instructors.

The only thing that federal money has to do with any of it is that once a given educational institution meets the minimum standards in all of those areas, the federal govenment can feel safe to let some money flow to either the institution itself, or to its students in the form of financial aid. Accreditation is not merely a random categorization of schools which so do. It's not just making sure that the right eggs are in the right baskets. Accreditation is about ensuring QUALITY. That is why, in most other English-speaking countries which have a culture of educational accountability, and which require of their educational institutions that they be approved and accredited, the agency which does the accrediting has the word "quality" (and usually, also, the word "assurance" following it) in its name.

Diploma mills are a huge business. The make for their owners literally millions of dollars. Said owners have a high stake in confusing the issues and hopefully causing potential students to be duped and to pay them for their fake credentials. Said students then, later, live to regret it... some of them even face, in some states, criminal charges for having fake credentials from nefarious diploma mills.

Claiming fake accreditation (which is pretty much any"accreditation" which isn't granted by a USDE- and/or CHEA-approved agency) is one of the diploma millist's biggest tricks. Trying to confuse the public about what accreditation really means is one of their second-biggest tricks. DO NOT BE FOOLED.

Rely on what you read on the USDE and/or CHEA web sites. And then, if you'd really like to understand diploma mills (and accreditation mills), pick-up a copy of this book:

Degree Mills: The Billion-dollar Industry That

Has Sold Over A Million Fake Diplomas

by Allen Ezell and John Bear

Paperback: 318 pages, English

Publisher: Prometheus Books; 1st edition (January 2005)

ISBN-10: 159102238X or ISBN-13: 978-1591022381

It's an eye-opening, must-read book for anyone who trul wants to understand this troubling subject.

Someone else then added:

Domain name contact info for PSU is as follows...

ESTATE TRANSACTIONS INC.

email: vj9nz8cp8hn@networksolutionsprivateregistration.com

ATTN: E-PSU.COM

c/o Network Solutions

P.O. Box 459

Drums, PA 18222

Phone: 570-708-8780

DesElms adds:

Indeed. Obfuscated domain name registration is very common with diploma mills. They know they're criminals, so they obviously don't want to make it easy for anyone to know who they are. So the degree-seeker consider PSU needs to ask himself/herself if he would ever want to give his/her hard-earned money to a place that's keeping secret something as basic as who they really are.

Res ipsa loquitur. (Latin for "the thing speaks for itself.")

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βˆ™ 10y ago
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βˆ™ 12y ago

PLEASE NOTE THAT MANY OF THESE COMMENTS RELATE TO THE UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX, NOT PHOENIX STATE. PSU DOES NOT CHARGE $7,000 FOR ANY CLASS, THEIR AVERAGE IS $200. SEE WWW.E-PSU.COM FOR PRICE EXAMPLES. PHOENIX STATE AND THE UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX ARE UNRELATED.

If you do a "whois" you'll file that the website link for the "accrediting organization" that certifies them is owned by the same n'er do well as the PSU web site. The professional association of which they bost membership on "becomeabodyguard.com" is, you guessed it, also registered to the same owner. These bozos weren't even smart enough to register the fake references under a different domain owner, or use domains by proxy.

yAH I AGREE

I contacted University of Phoenix (UOPX) in January of 2008. I was curious about the courses they offered, I showed some interest, but was a bit nervous. It seemed to be too good to be true, however Steve, the academic Counsellor seemed to have my best interest in mind and wasn't going to pressure me into doing anything. This seemed odd to me considering they have blanketed themselves over every website, career fair and TV station with ads to get students to enrol.

I am upset for the above reasons, and I want to add my voice to the pool of people who have been misled by the recruiters. Maybe its poor training, maybe they don't want people to think its hokey *if the course was demonstrated to you or you had a trial of a few weeks to get a feel for it, you would walk away shaking your head after linking that up with a price tag, and I think that right there is a real lawsuit and I would pursue it if I was a lawyer* so in that respect I would say I even find it deceptive. Had I known exactly how the school was organized, I would have rethought my position in joining, had I been warned that the website didnt always take submissions, I would have certainly made more of an effort to ensure they submitted properly and had I known the teachers couldn't keep track of 10 or so students assignments as they were submitted (once I can forgive, I went off on both teachers for it when it happened, they should have gotten the point then and there that 2k per month means I am paying for perfection on their part. 24000 a year, 72000 for a BA in the IT field that would have been totally worthless as a diploma to any employer

University of Phoenix (UOPX) is a total financial scam! They charged me $2,600.00 for a class I was never enrolled in. I made frequent telephone calls to their financial aid office which refuse to correct the error. Finally, after filing a complaint with the Better Business Bureau UOP admitted that they had "mistakenly" failed to process my withdrawal request, unfortunately not before they had sent sent a bill to collections, which is now showing on my credit report. When I asked them to have it removed from my credit report they never responded, now five month later it is still showing on my credit report, and to make matters worse they recently resubmitted the debt again, but this time to a different collection agency Cost Professional Inc., out of Anaheim, CA. The scam is if a student withdraws from UOP, UOP will attempt to destroy their good financial standing or credit so that they will not be able to enroll in a different University. They should be punished by the law.

===============

People, please sympathize with me here or your children/yourself would be the victim like me today. I been got trick and trap by this website here. First off all, i was looking for the Ultra sound technician as i was get tin he adverstise through my email. then i click in this link and it ask me to leave the name and number then they would call me back. Next day, they they call me up and meet me at the office in Fairfield Califnornia, then told me that they do not have the program like i was asked for, however they refer me the other programs but it has to be Bacherlor degree, etc...and not to worry about the financial problem because the Government financial aid will help you to cover that... "However, you could be the whatever project mananger ... after i graduate..." (they said and promise me with the good and better future). Then i choose the other program which i like beside the Ultra Sound Technician such as "Computer Security Information". At the first class, my feelings told me something wrong with this school, i tried to drop and not continuous with this school, then they were threaten me and said it too late now because I have been sign the contract and paper, and I could be in debt with colector if i tried to get out with this school. Then they offered me to take one more class so the financial will cover your classes tuition... Now, at the end situation, i am in debt with more then $7, 211.00 for those 2 classes...

In my conlusion, this school are trick and trap for all of us here. Myself, you or may be even your children could be a victim right now and future. I hope our government should shut down this school for good, or otherwise they will continuous to trick and ripe off the other people like me.

P.S: I was learn nothing from this school, what i was doing in this school was attend online 1 or 2 hours every day from Mon-Sat and talk all B.S to whatever subjects as teacher and students posted, beside nothing relate to my major. So, it looks like we use the money to buying our degree... And i believe most students from this school after they graduate they would have no skills at all to their major study beside chit chat online, , , , , , , , However, i was learn my lesson which is $7, 221 for these 2 classes at Pheonix Univerisy. PLEASE DO NOT TRY AT HOME, AND PLEASE DO NOT TRY TO BE LIKE ME.!!!

I am laid off and have no job... i do not know how i would paid them back with this BIG AMOUNT of money. PLEASE HELP ME OUT TO TALK ABOUT THIS TO OTHER PEOPLE, AND PLEASE DO NOT BE A VICTIM LIKE ME.

I am laid off and have no job, i also have 1 kid and another one on the way ... Now, I am really stressing out, and i do not know how would I could pay off for this debt with this BIG AMOUNT of money. My family could have no future with this situation........ HELP HELP HELP me out PLEASEEEEEE

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βˆ™ 15y ago

There does not appear to be a university under the name, Phoenix State University. If you are referring to the University of phoenix, or Phoenix University, both institutions have the preferred regional accreditation and are fine. If the university you are referring to is some type of private institution, then that is another issue.

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βˆ™ 12y ago

Yes. It is advertised as an award-winning college located in Phoenix for its "#1 online resource for home-based business."

Other research has shown that this school is a scam website and contains a variety of complaints as well.

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βˆ™ 9y ago

The Phoenix State University has several bad reviews and is accredited with a F by the BBB. It is a scam school and the diploma is useless.

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βˆ™ 12y ago

According to the WASC website, no.

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