June 15, 2012

Princeton Review charged city for tutoring it didn’t provide

by Philissa Cramer, originally poste on Gotham Schools on 5/1/12

A company hired to provide tutoring services in New York City bilked the city out of millions of dollars in federal funding for poor students, according to the U.S. Justice Department.

The department today filed a civil fraud lawsuit against The Princeton Review, Inc., alleging that the company had gotten the city to reimburse it for tutoring it had not provided. According to the suit, the company’s fraudulent claims continued even after a city investigation — never made public — turned up misconduct in 2006.

The tutoring program, known as “supplemental education services” and mandated for low-performing students in high-needs under the No Child Left Behind law, reimbursed providers based on the number of students they served. Princeton Review documented how many students it had tutored by turning in signed attendance sheets; it also gave bonuses to supervisors of tutoring sites where attendance was high. One of those supervisors, Ana Azocar, is also named in the lawsuit.

The bonus system incentivized fraud, according to the suit. Investigators found that many of the signatures showing student attendance were falsified — and sometimes names were even misspelled. The company sought reimbursement for tutoring students who were out of the country and holding sessions when schools were closed, according to the suit. At one school, the now-closed M.S. 399 in the Bronx, the company said it had tutored 74 students on New Year’s Day.

To read more click here.

Popularity: 11% [?]

Filed under: Commercial Providers,NCLB

No Comments

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Network

For a free monthly newsletter,

"Best of Journal",

enter your email and click

"subscribe to newsletter"


SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Resources