In the media

In the media

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21-30 of 2000 results

  • Newspaper

    CHED urged to address problem of diploma mills victimizing teachers

    Philippines

    Press

    Victoria Tulad - ABC News

    Senators urged the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) to closely monitor diploma mills offering unaccredited graduate programs after around 100 teachers in Palawan reportedly paid for online courses that were later not recognized. The school involved allegedly offered an unauthorized extension program and is now under investigation. Officials encouraged teachers to verify programs through the Philippine Teacher Education Registry (PhilTER) database, while CHED also acknowledged staffing shortages in regional offices that make monitoring difficult.

  • Newspaper

    DepEd advances transparency measures in education procurement with Open Ownership partnership

    Philippines

    Press

    Merlina Hernando-Malipot - Manilla Bulletin

    The Department of Education (DepEd) of the Philippines has partnered with Open Ownership to strengthen transparency and integrity in education procurement. DepEd manages the country’s largest education budget, making procurement a high-risk area for corruption. The initiative pilots the use of beneficial ownership data to identify hidden conflicts of interest, bid rotation, market concentration and undisclosed links among suppliers. The agreement includes technical assistance and contract analysis to reduce irregularities and aligns with the New Government Procurement Act.

  • Newspaper

    Benue Government defends education reforms, denies corruption allegations in schools

    Nigeria

    Press

    George Okoh - Arise News

    The Benue State Education Quality Assurance Board (BEQAEB) rejected claims of fraud, stating that all regulatory actions are backed by law. Its Executive Secretary emphasized efforts to strengthen school monitoring, accreditation, and enforcement. The state enabled major investments in education, including new school buildings, renovations, and the recruitment of over 9,000 teachers, with the sector receiving over 15% of the 2025 budget and 25.29% in 2026. Scepticism emerges from exorbitant charges by certain schools to the BEQAEB.

  • Newspaper

    Corruption continues to undermine inclusive education across Africa, report warns

    Zimbabwe

    Press

    Jean d’Amour Mugabo - Pan African Visions

    A new Transparency International policy brief warns that corruption in African education systems disproportionately harms women, girls, marginalised groups and learners with disabilities. Bribery, sextortion, payroll fraud and mismanagement of resources remain widespread at the service delivery level. Country findings show high bribery in school admissions in the DRC (56%) and Zimbabwe (72%), payroll fraud in Ghana, exclusion of disabled learners in Madagascar, and integrity risks in Rwanda’s grading and school programmes. Weak oversight and accountability mechanisms are identified as key drivers of persistent corruption.

  • Newspaper

    Inside the ‘ghost student’ scam using identity theft to steal financial aid

    USA

    Press

    Steve Osunsami; Lucien Bruggeman; Emily Kohlberg - ABC News

    An ABC investigation revealed large‑scale financial aid fraud in which scammers used stolen identities to enrol as “ghost students”. Once registered, they applied for grants and loans and vanished with the funds, leaving victims unknowingly burdened with debt. Officials report over 200 active investigations, with AI‑generated applications worsening the problem. Community colleges remain key targets due to open‑enrolment processes. In California alone, nearly a third of community college applicants in 2024 were flagged as fraudulent.

  • Newspaper

    EFF Youth Command lays charges over sale of university placements

    South Africa

    Press

    - YFM

    The Economic Freedom Fighters Youth Command in South Africa opened a criminal case against individuals accused of running a syndicate that sells university and TVET college placements. A spokesperson claims that students were charged between R3,000 and R4,000 for admission, accommodation and bursaries, facilitated through WhatsApp groups and apparent internal contacts. Various institutions across South Africa are alleged to be involved in the actions. Evidence submitted to police includes messages, payment records and testimonies from victims.

  • Newspaper

    Investigators recover ZAR1.7 billion in unspent student aid

    South Africa

    Press

    Shonisani Tshikalange - TimesLive

    The Special Investigating Unit (SIU) in South Africa has recovered more than R1.7 billion in unallocated or improperly retained NSFAS funds from universities, TVET colleges, and unqualified beneficiaries. The funds relate to amounts held from 2016 to 2021 that institutions failed to refund after students deregistered or transferred. Weak NSFAS control and reconciliation systems during those years contributed to the accumulation of unreturned funds.

  • Newspaper

    Net closes on more than 8000 high-risk ghost worker cases

    South Africa

    Press

    Theolin Tembo - Cape Times

    The South African government has identified 8,854 high-risk cases in its effort to eliminate ghost work in the public sector. In its process to verify all its employees, the highlighted cases were identified to show payment irregularities that need to be clarified in an outstanding audit. As part of the efforts to address this issue, the Education Labour Relations Council is undertaking physical verification of teachers and learners in order to identify possible ghost teachers and ensure spending efficiency.

  • Newspaper

    Supreme Court orders audit of Indian private universities over governance and transparency issues

    India

    Press

    Akshita Jolly - India Today

    A Supreme Court mandate has prompted an expansive audit of private, non-government, and deemed universities in India. The directive follows a student's conflict over a name amendment, revealing larger concerns about administrative transparency and governance within these institutions, and in particular the prevalence of slow or ineffective grievance response systems within Indian higher education. Other areas where opaque practices are often reported, such as admission, recruitment and use of funds, are also now under direct examination.

  • Newspaper

    Addressing sexual corruption in Rwanda's higher education institutions

    Rwanda

    Press

    Annie Healion - Transparency International

    Transparency International has published a report outlining the reality of sexual corruption in Rwanda’s education system. It outlines how sexual demands are used, especially in higher education, in return for favours such as grade allocation, class access and exam participation. As women only account for 34% of the student population in higher education and 25% of academic staff, the system remains vulnerable to gender-based violence.

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