Talk:Everest University
"The good news" language sounds like a press release. In fact, most of this article doesn't seem encyclopedic in tone. Also, no mention is made in the accreditation debate section that the high prestige schools are regionally accredited, not nationally, and that some (if not most) regionally accredited schools don't accept graduation from a nationally accredited school as qualifications for entry into their graduate program. I know that regionally accredited schools don't accept credentials from nationally accredited schools for instructors. (If you want to teach in a regionally accredited college, you need to have a Masters Degree and 18 credits of graduate courses in the field you want to teach in.)
All in all, this article badly needs revision.Fredrik Coulter (talk) 20:56, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
I attempted to make the article more Encyclopedic in tone, but it's a hard job. --99.250.177.248 (talk) 01:19, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
I agree that this article seem very un-encyclopedic. My guess is that it was drafted by an Everest University employee. On a possibly unrelated note, the Controversy section notes that $99,900.00 is almost one million. I think it's a little bit closer to a hundred thousand.