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American World UniversityAmerican World University (AWU) describes itself as an "institution of post-secondary education." It has no physical campus. It purports to offer a college education and awards college degrees, but authorities in the United States generally consider it to be a diploma mill. As of November 2004 it was offering a doctorate program for $1600 as a "holiday special." Founded in 1990 by Maxine Asher, AWU operated out of an Iowa City, Iowa office until 2000, when an increase in Iowa standards for post-secondary institutions forced it to relocate to Pascagoula, Mississippi. Asher herself is based in California. American World University is not officially accredited by any institutional accrediting body recognized by the United States Department of Education. It is listed as an accredited university by the World Association of Universities and Colleges http://www.web-hed.com/wauc/universities.htm, an organization that is also run by Maxine Asher. As part of its services, AWU claims to offer people the opportunity to earn college credits based on work and life experience, and to take courses at home through distance education. However, some dispute AWU's claim that they provide legitimate academic services. John Bear, the author of Bear's Guide to Earning Degrees through Distance Learning, said of AWU, "Academically, there's nothing there." AWU caters especially to students outside the United States and allows students to complete assignments in their primary language rather than English. Among those to whom AWU has awarded degrees is Hamzah Haz, former Vice President of Indonesia. In January, 2004, the State of Hawaii's Office of Consumer Protection won a lawsuit against AWU; the judgement enjoined AWU from "Providing any post-secondary instructional programs or courses leading to a degree" or "Acting as or holding themselves out as a 'college', 'academy', 'institute', 'institution', 'university' or anything similar thereto." The Daily Iowan describes AWU in depth in an article entitled "Stealth U. in Iowa City duped many, experts say". According to the article, Michael Lambert, the executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Distance Education and Training Council said Asher applied for accreditation for AWU to his organization in 1996. He said she complained about the requirements and the paperwork and challenged him to visit her in person. He recalls flying to Iowa City and meeting her in a few empty rooms that were the headquarters of AWU. After a 30-minute meeting, Asher withdrew the application for accreditation. The same article relates the experiences of a student named John Shaw who he says he received specific assurances from Asher that the master's degree he was seeking would be acknowledged in Saudi Arabia. When he applied for a job in that country, he was told that neither the degree nor the school were considered legitimate: "In fact, they told me that I was wasting my time and money studying with that school." External links
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