Breyer State Affiliates

Discussion in 'Accreditation Discussions (RA, DETC, state approva' started by galanga, Sep 3, 2004.

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  1. galanga

    galanga New Member

    I hadn't realized that Breyer State has "affiliates" although it has had some kind of relationship with the various Saint Regis entities. The list:
    • Marc College of Management and Technology
    • Concordia School of Management and Technology
    • The National Board of Professional and Ethical Standards (!!)
    • London College of Management Studies
    • Success Is Easy
    For reasons that escape me, the "Success Is Easy" entity uses a picture of a horse as its logo.

    G
     
  2. italiansupernova

    italiansupernova New Member

    As found on: http://www.breyerstate.com/successiseasy.htm


    "A source for the latest information in a changing world, Success Is Easy publishes and distributes equine books, e-books, audio tapes and syndicated columns for specialized media, including newspapers, radio and television. Success Is Easy instructors have been contributing horse training and health care articles to the international horse community for more than 35 years. It is knowledge, applied to a purpose, which is true power."

    The reason it's a horse is because "Success is Easy" seems to promote equine or "horse studies". The Success is Easy outfit is ran by a dude named Don Blazer who heavily promotes the BSU equine studies program on his website: http://www.donblazer.com/

    The equine studies is not listed on BSU's website for whatever reason. I suppose they're using this outside party to get in with the "horse crowd" though I don't know how prominent of an
    individual Mr. Blazer is with the aforementioned horse crowd.

    Here's what Google will bring up when you type in "online equine studies". Breyer State rears it's head on more than one occasion:
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=online+equine+degree&btnG=Search
     
  3. italiansupernova

    italiansupernova New Member

    While on the subject of Breyer State, I should mention that after haggling with their online representative about why they're not licensed in Idaho, she said, and I quote, "The Breyer State Executive Management Team has made an application to become state licensed." Oh, and of course, that's the ONLY detail they could give me.

    I was going to call the Idaho education folks, but I wasn't exactly sure which office and/or individual to contact and I didn't want to be annoying by calling the wrong department or speaking to the wrong person.
     
  4. uncle janko

    uncle janko member

    Just to bring the record up to date, the "Concordia" mentioned above has nothing whatever to do with Concordia University in Quebec or with the Concordias run by various liberal Lutheran church bodies. Those are legit.
     
  5. Bruce

    Bruce Moderator

    If I were a betting man, I'd wager heavily that Breyer State is also closely affiliated with Canyon College.

    Compare the websites, and especially the faculty lists.
     
  6. George Brown

    George Brown Active Member

    Maybe this gave it away Bruce?

    http://www.canyoncollege.edu/cc/accredit.htm

    For verification of Canyon's legal authority to grant degrees, you may contact:

    The Embassy of Liberia
    First Secretary Console General
    Abdulah K. Dunbar
    5201 16th Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20011
    (202) 723-0437

    Cheers,

    George
     
  7. galanga

    galanga New Member

    he has knobs and dials

    There's also this on Dominck Flarey's "Central States Consortium of Colleges & Schools" site: Canyon and Breyer State are the only full-fledged accredited entities.

    It is amusing how "consul" keeps getting misspelled as "console" as if Mr. Dunbar is really a control panel for something.

    G
     
  8. BillDayson

    BillDayson New Member

    Re: he has knobs and dials

    Insert cash. Push button..
     
  9. galanga

    galanga New Member

    and it was worth a bowl of noodles!

    I did that once in Japan. And the document was actually worth something! The fellow cooking right next to the insert-money-receive document machine traded me an excellent bowl of noodles for my piece of paper. I have no idea what was floating in the broth with the noodles, but it was tasty.

    I do not know what the cook would have done if presented with a credential from an unaccredited entity issuing degrees to unqualified gaijin.

    G
     

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