“Education, once defended as a public good, now functions as a vehicle for private gain.”
From Collapse to Contagion
The College Meltdown never truly ended—it evolved.
After a decade of spectacular for-profit implosions, the higher education sector has reconstituted itself around new instruments of profit: debt servicing, edtech speculation, and corporate “partnerships” that disguise privatization as innovation.
The College Meltdown Index—tracking a mix of education providers, servicers, and learning platforms—reveals a sector in quiet decay.
Legacy for-profits like National American University (NAUH) and Aspen Group (ASPU) trade at penny-stock levels, while Lincoln Educational (LINC) and Perdoceo (PRDO) stumble through cost-cutting cycles.
Even the supposed disruptors—Chegg (CHGG), Udemy (UDMY), and Coursera (COUR)—are faltering as user growth plateaus and AI reshapes their value proposition.
Meanwhile, SoFi (SOFI), Sallie Mae (SLM), and Maximus (MMS) thrive—not through learning, but through the management of debt.
The Meltdown Graveyard
Below lies a sampling of the education sector’s ghost tickers—the silent casualties of a system that turned public trust into private loss.
| Symbol | Institution | Status | Approx. Closure/Delisting |
|---|---|---|---|
| CLAS.U | Class Technologies | Defunct | 2024 |
| INST | Instructure (pre-acquisition) | Acquired by Thoma Bravo | 2020 |
| TWOUQ | 2U, Inc. | Bankrupt | 2025 |
| CPLA | Capella University | Merged with Strayer (Strategic Ed.) | 2018 |
| ESI-OLD | ITT Technical Institute | Defunct | 2016 |
| EDMC | Education Management Corporation | Defunct | 2018 |
| COCO-OLD | Corinthian Colleges | Defunct | 2015 |
| APOL | Apollo Education Group (U. of Phoenix) | Taken Private | 2017 |
Each ticker represents not only a failed business model—but a generation of indebted students.
The Phoenix That Shouldn’t Have Risen
No institution better symbolizes this moral decay than the University of Phoenix and Phoenix Education Partners (PXED).
At its height, Phoenix enrolled nearly half a million students. By 2017, following federal investigations and mass defaults, Apollo Education Group—its parent company—collapsed under scrutiny.
But rather than disappearing, Phoenix was quietly resurrected through a private equity buyout led by Apollo Global Management, Vistria Group, and Najafi Companies.
Freed from public oversight, the university continued to enroll vulnerable adult learners, harvesting federal aid while shedding accountability.
In 2023, the University of Idaho’s proposed acquisition of Phoenix provoked national outrage, forcing state officials to confront a basic question: Should a public university absorb a for-profit brand built on exploitation?
The deal collapsed—but the temptation to monetize Phoenix’s infrastructure remains. In 2025, a small portion became publicly traded. Its call centers and online systems remain models of enrollment efficiency, designed to extract just enough engagement to secure tuition payments.
From Education to Extraction
The sector’s transformation reveals a deeper moral hazard.
If students succeed, investors profit.
If students fail, federal subsidies and servicer contracts ensure the money keeps flowing.
Executives face no downside. Shareholders are protected. The losses fall on students and taxpayers.
In this sense, the “meltdown” is not a market failure—it’s a market design.
“The winners are those who most efficiently extract value from hope.”
Public universities increasingly partner with private Online Program Managers (OPMs), leasing their brands to companies that control marketing, pricing, and student data. The once-clear line between public and for-profit education has blurred beyond recognition.
The Quiet Winners of Collapse
A few companies continue to prosper by aligning with “practical” or “mission-safe” sectors:
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Adtalem (ATGE) in nursing and health education,
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Grand Canyon Education (LOPE) in faith-branded online degrees,
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Bright Horizons (BFAM) in corporate childcare and workforce training.
Yet all remain heavily dependent on public dollars and tax incentives. The state subsidizes their existence; the market collects the rewards.
Meanwhile, 2U’s bankruptcy leaves elite universities scrambling to explain how a publicly traded OPM, once championed as the future of online learning, could disintegrate overnight—taking with it a network of high-priced “nonprofit” certificate programs.
A Reckoning Deferred
The College Meltdown Index exposes a system that has internalized its own failures.
Fraud has been replaced by financial engineering, transparency by outsourcing, and accountability by spin.
The real collapse is not in the market—but in moral logic. Education, once the cornerstone of social mobility, has become a speculative instrument traded between hedge funds and holding companies.
Until policymakers—and universities themselves—confront the ethics of profit in higher education, the meltdown will persist, slowly consuming what remains of the public good.
“The real question is not whether the system will collapse, but who will rebuild it—and for whom.”
Sources:
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Higher Education Inquirer, College Meltdown 2.0 Index (Nov. 2025)
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SEC Filings (2010–2025)
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U.S. Department of Education, Heightened Cash Monitoring Reports
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An American Sickness – Elisabeth Rosenthal
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The Goosestep – Upton Sinclair
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Medical Apartheid – Harriet A. Washington
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Body and Soul – Alondra Nelson
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The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks – Rebecca Skloot
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